Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Cleveland Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Cleveland poems. This is a select list of the best famous Cleveland poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Cleveland poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of cleveland poems.

Search and read the best famous Cleveland poems, articles about Cleveland poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Cleveland poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Honky Tonk in Cleveland Ohio

 IT’S a jazz affair, drum crashes and cornet razzes
The trombone pony neighs and the tuba jackass snorts.
The banjo tickles and titters too awful.
The chippies talk about the funnies in the papers.
The cartoonists weep in their beer.
Ship riveters talk with their feet To the feet of floozies under the tables.
A quartet of white hopes mourn with interspersed snickers: “I got the blues.
I got the blues.
I got the blues.
” And … as we said earlier: The cartoonists weep in their beer.


Written by David Lehman | Create an image from this poem

Ode To Modern Art

 Come on in and stay a while
I'll photograph you emerging from the revolving door
like Frank O'Hara dating the muse of modern art
Talking about the big Pollock show is better
than going to it on a dismal Saturday afternoon
when my luncheon partner is either the author or the subject
of The Education of Henry Adams at a hard-to-get-
a-table-at restaurant on Cornelia Street
just what is chaos theory anyway
I'm not sure but it helps explain "Autumn Rhythm"
the closest thing to chaos without crossing the border
I think you should write that book on Eakins and also the one
on nineteenth century hats the higher the hat the sweller the toff
and together we will come up with Mondrian in the grid of Manhattan
Gerald Murphy's "Still Life with Wasp" and the best Caravaggio in the country
in Kansas City well it's been swell, see you in Cleveland April 23
The reason time goes faster as you grow older is that each day
is a tinier proportion of the totality of days in your life
Written by Weldon Kees | Create an image from this poem

Dead March

 Under the bunker, where the reek of kerosene 
Prepared the marriage rite, leader and whore, 
Imperfect kindling even in this wind, burn on.
Someone in uniform hums Brahms.
Servants prepare Eyewitness stories as the night comes down, as smoking coals await Boots on the stone, the occupying troops.
Howl ministers.
Deep in Kyffhauser Mountain's underground, The Holy Roman Emperor snores on, in sleep enduring Seven centuries.
His long red beard Grows through the table to the floor.
He moves a little.
Far in the labyrinth, low thunder rumbles and dies out.
Twitch and lie still.
Is Hitler now in the Himalayas? We are in Cleveland, or Sioux Falls.
The architecture Seems like Omaha, the air pumped in from Düsseldorf.
Cold rain keeps dripping just outside the bars.
The testicles Burst on the table as the commissar Untwists the vise, removes his gloves, puts down Izvestia.
(Old saboteurs, controlled by Trotsky's Scheming and unconquered ghost, still threaten Novgorod.
) --And not far from the pits, these bones of ours, Burned, bleached, and splintering, are shoveled, ready for the fields.
Written by John Wilmot | Create an image from this poem

Signior *****

 You ladies of merry England
Who have been to kiss the Duchess's hand,
Pray, did you not lately observe in the show
A noble Italian called Signior *****?

This signior was one of the Duchess's train
And helped to conduct her over the main;
But now she cries out, 'To the Duke I will go,
I have no more need for Signior *****.
' At the Sign of the Cross in St James's Street, When next you go thither to make yourselves sweet By buying of powder, gloves, essence, or so, You may chance to get a sight of Signior *****.
You would take him at first for no person of note, Because he appears in a plain leather coat, But when you his virtuous abilities know, You'll fall down and worship Signior *****.
My Lady Southesk, heaven prosper her for't, First clothed him in satin, then brought him to court; But his head in the circle he scarcely durst show, So modest a youth was Signior *****.
The good Lady Suffolk, thinking no harm, Had got this poor stranger hid under her arm.
Lady Betty by chance came the secret to know And from her own mother stole Signior *****.
The Countess of Falmouth, of whom people tell Her footmen wear shirts of a guinea an ell, Might save that expense, if she did but know How lusty a swinger is Signior *****.
By the help of this gallant the Countess of Rafe Against the fierce Harris preserved herself safe; She stifled him almost beneath her pillow, So closely she embraced Signior *****.
The pattern of virtue, Her Grace of Cleveland, Has swallowed more pricks than the ocean has sand; But by rubbing and scrubbing so wide does it grow, It is fit for just nothing but Signior *****.
Our dainty fine duchesses have got a trick To dote on a fool for the sake of his prick, The fops were undone did their graces but know The discretion and vigour of Signior *****.
The Duchess of Modena, though she looks so high, With such a gallant is content to lie, And for fear that the English her secrets should know, For her gentleman usher took Signior *****.
The Countess o'th'Cockpit (who knows not her name? She's famous in story for a killing dame), When all her old lovers forsake her, I trow, She'll then be contented with Signior *****.
Red Howard, red Sheldon, and Temple so tall Complain of his absence so long from Whitehall.
Signior Barnard has promised a journey to go And bring back his countryman, Signior *****.
Doll Howard no longer with His Highness must range, And therefore is proferred this civil exchange: Her teeth being rotten, she smells best below, And needs must be fitted for Signior *****.
St Albans with wrinkles and smiles in his face, Whose kindness to strangers becomes his high place, In his coach and six horses is gone to Bergo To take the fresh air with Signior *****.
Were this signior but known to the citizen fops, He'd keep their fine wives from the foremen o'their shops; But the rascals deserve their horns should still grow For burning the Pope and his nephew, *****.
Tom Killigrew's wife, that Holland fine flower, At the sight of this signior did fart and belch sour, And her Dutch breeding the further to show, Says, 'Welcome to England, Mynheer Van *****.
' He civilly came to the Cockpit one night, And proferred his service to fair Madam Knight.
Quoth she, 'I intrigue with Captain Cazzo; Your nose in mine ****, good Signior *****.
' This signior is sound, safe, ready, and dumb As ever was candle, carrot, or thumb; Then away with these nasty devices, and show How you rate the just merit of Signior *****.
Count Cazzo, who carries his nose very high, In passion he swore his rival should die; Then shut himself up to let the world know Flesh and blood could not bear it from Signior *****.
A rabble of pricks who were welcome before, Now finding the porter denied them the door, Maliciously waited his coming below And inhumanly fell on Signior *****.
Nigh wearied out, the poor stranger did fly, And along the Pall Mall they followed full cry; The women concerned from every window Cried, 'For heaven's sake, save Signior *****.
' The good Lady Sandys burst into a laughter To see how the ballocks came wobbling after, And had not their weight retarded the foe, Indeed't had gone hard with Signior *****.
Written by Philip Levine | Create an image from this poem

Voyages

 Pond snipe, bleached pine, rue weed, wart -- 
I walk by sedge and brown river rot 
to where the old lake boats went daily out.
All the ships are gone, the gray wharf fallen in upon itself.
Even the channel's grown over.
Once we set sail here for Bob-Lo, the Brewery Isles, Cleveland.
We would have gone as far as Niagara or headed out to open sea if the Captain said so, but the Captain drank.
Blood-eyed in the morning, coffee shaking in his hand, he'd plead to be put ashore or drowned, but no one heard.
Enormous in his long coat, Sinbad would take the helm and shout out orders swiped from pirate movies.
Once we docked north of Vermillion to meet a single spur of the old Ohio Western and sat for days waiting for a train, waiting for someone to claim the cargo or give us anything to take back, like the silver Cadillac roadster it was rumored we had once freighted by itself.
The others went foraging and left me with the Captain, locked up in the head and sober.
Two days passed, I counted eighty tankers pulling through the flat lake waters on their way, I counted blackbirds gathering at dusk in the low trees, clustered like bees.
I counted the hours from noon to noon and got nowhere.
At last the Captain slept.
I banked the fire, raised anchor, cast off, and jumping ship left her drifting out on the black bay.
I walked seven miles to the Interstate and caught a meat truck heading west, and came to over beer, hashbrowns, and fried eggs in a cafe northwest of Omaha.
I could write how the radio spoke of war, how the century was half its age, how dark clouds gathered in the passes up ahead, the dispossessed had clogged the roads, but none the less I alone made my way to the western waters, a foreign ship, another life, and disappeared from all Id known.
In fact I come home every year, I walk the same streets where I grew up, but now with my boys.
I settled down, just as you did, took a degree in library sciences, and got my present position with the county.
I'm supposed to believe something ended.
I'm supposed to be dried up.
I'm supposed to represent a yearning, but I like it the way it is.
Not once has the ocean wind changed and brought the taste of salt over the coastal hills and through the orchards to my back yard.
Not once have I wakened cold and scared out of a dreamless sleep into a dreamless life and cried and cried out for what I left behind.


Written by Edgar Lee Masters | Create an image from this poem

Magrady Graham

 Tell me, was Altgeld elected Governor?
For when the returns began to come in
And Cleveland was sweeping the East,
It was too much for you, poor old heart,
Who had striven for democracy
In the long, long years of defeat.
And like a watch that is worn I felt you growing slower until you stopped.
Tell me, was Altgeld elected, And what did he do? Did they bring his head on a platter to a dancer, Or did he triumph for the people? For when I saw him And took his hand, The child-like blueness of his eyes Moved me to tears, And there was an air of eternity about him, Like the cold, clear light that rests at dawn On the hills!

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry