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Best Famous Coney Poems

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

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Written by Conrad Aiken | Create an image from this poem

Turns And Movies: Rose And Murray

 After the movie, when the lights come up, 
He takes her powdered hand behind the wings; 
She, all in yellow, like a buttercup, 
Lifts her white face, yearns up to him, and clings; 
And with a silent, gliding step they move 
Over the footlights, in familiar glare, 
Panther-like in the Tango whirl of love, 
He fawning close on her with idiot stare. 
Swiftly they cross the stage. O lyric ease! 
The drunken music follows the sure feet, 
The swaying elbows, intergliding knees, 
Moving with slow precision on the beat. 
She was a waitress in a restaurant, 
He picked her up and taught her how to dance. 
She feels his arms, lifts an appealing glance, 
But knows he spent last evening with Zudora; 
And knows that certain changes are before her.

The brilliant spotlight circles them around, 
Flashing the spangles on her weighted dress. 
He mimics wooing her, without a sound, 
Flatters her with a smoothly smiled caress. 
He fears that she will someday ***** his act; 
Feeling his anger. He will quit her soon. 
He nods for faster music. He will contract 
Another partner, under another moon. 
Meanwhile, 'smooth stuff.' He lets his dry eyes flit 
Over the yellow faces there below; 
Maybe he'll cut down on his drinks a bit, 
Not to annoy her, and spoil the show. . . 
Zudora, waiting for her turn to come, 
Watches them from the wings and fatly leers 
At the girl's younger face, so white and dumb, 
And the fixed, anguished eyes, ready for tears.

She lies beside him, with a false wedding-ring, 
In a cheap room, with moonlight on the floor; 
The moonlit curtains remind her much of spring, 
Of a spring evening on the Coney shore. 
And while he sleeps, knowing she ought to hate, 
She still clings to the lover that she knew,— 
The one that, with a pencil on a plate, 
Drew a heart and wrote, 'I'd die for you.'


Written by Paul Muldoon | Create an image from this poem

The Coney

 Although I have never learned to mow
I suddenly found myself half-way through
last year's pea-sticks
and cauliflower stalks
in our half-acre of garden.
My father had always left the whetstone
safely wrapped
in his old, tweed cap
and balanced on one particular plank
beside the septic tank.

This past winter he had been too ill
to work. The scythe would dull
so much more quickly in my hands
than his, and was so often honed,
that while the blade
grew less and less a blade
the whetstone had entirely disappeared
and a lop-eared
coney was now curled inside the cap.
He whistled to me through the gap

in his front teeth;
'I was wondering, chief,
if you happen to know the name
of the cauliflowers in your cold-frame
that you still hope to dibble
in this unenviable
bit of ground?'
'They would be All the Year Round.'
'I guessed as much'; with that he swaggered
along the diving-board

and jumped. The moment he hit the water
he lost his tattered
bathing-togs
to the swimming pool's pack of dogs.
'Come in'; this flayed
coney would parade
and pirouette like honey on a spoon:
'Come on in; Paddy Muldoon.'
And although I have never learned to swim
I would willingly have followed him.

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry