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Best Famous Complements Poems

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

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Written by Craig Raine | Create an image from this poem

City Gent

 On my desk, a set of labels
or a synopsis of leeks,
blanched by the sun
and trailing their roots

like a watering can.
Beyond and below, diminished by distance, a taxi shivers at the lights: a shining moorhen with an orange nodule set over the beak, taking a passenger under its wing.
I turn away, confront the cuckold hatstand at bay in the corner, and eavesdrop (bless you!) on a hay-fever of brakes.
My Caran d'Ache are sharp as the tips of an iris and the four-tier file is spotted with rust: a study of plaice by a Japanese master, ochres exquisitely bled.
Instead of office work, I fish for complements and sport a pencil behind each ear, a bit of a devil, or trap the telephone awkwardly under my chin like Richard Crookback, crying, A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse! but only to myself, ironically: the tube is semi-stiff with stallion whangs, the chairman's Mercedes has windscreen wipers like a bird's broken tongue, and I am perfectly happy to see your head, quick round the door like a dryad, as I pretend to be Ovid in exile, composing Tristia and sad for the shining, the missed, the muscular beach.


Written by Thomas Lux | Create an image from this poem

Motel Seedy

 The artisans of this room, who designed the lamp base
(a huge red slug with a hole
where its heart should be) or chose this print
of a butterscotch sunset,
must have been abused in art class
as children, forced to fingerpaint
with a nose, or a tongue.
To put this color green--exhausted grave grass--to cinder blocks takes an understanding of loneliness and/or institutions that terrifies.
It would seem not smart to create a color scheme in a motel room that's likely to cause impotence in men and open sores in women, but that's what this puce bedspread with its warty, ratty tufts could do.
It complements the towels, torn and holding awful secrets like the sail on a life raft loaded with blackened, half-eaten corpses .
.
.
I think I owned this desk once, I think this chair is where I sat with the Help Wanted ads spread and wobbling before me as I looked for jobs to lead me upward: to rooms like this, in America, where I dreamed I lived .
.
.
Do I deprive tonight the beautician and her lover, a shower-head salesman, of this room? He is so seldom in town.
I felt by their glance in the hallway that my room, no.
17, means something (don't ask me to explain this) special to them.
Maybe they fell fiercely into each other here for the first time, maybe there was a passion preternatural.
I'm glad this room, so ugly, has known some love at $19.
00 double occupancy-- though not tonight, for a dollar fifty less.

Book: Shattered Sighs