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Best Famous Convalescent Poems

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

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Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

As One does Sickness over

 As One does Sickness over
In convalescent Mind,
His scrutiny of Chances
By blessed Health obscured --

As One rewalks a Precipice
And whittles at the Twig
That held Him from Perdition
Sown sidewise in the Crag

A Custom of the Soul
Far after suffering
Identity to question
For evidence't has been --


Written by Dorothy Parker | Create an image from this poem

Convalescent

 How shall I wail, that wasn't meant for weeping?
Love has run and left me, oh, what then?
Dream, then, I must, who never can be sleeping;
What if I should meet Love, once again?

What if I met him, walking on the highway?
Let him see how lightly I should care.
He'd travel his way, I would follow my way; Hum a little song, and pass him there.
What if at night, beneath a sky of ashes, He should seek my doorstep, pale with need? There could he lie, and dry would be my lashes; Let him stop his noise, and let me read.
Oh, but I'm gay, that's better off without him; Would he'd come and see me, laughing here.
Lord! Don't I know I'd have my arms about him, Crying to him, "Oh, come in, my dear!"
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

The healed Heart shows its shallow scar

 The healed Heart shows its shallow scar
With confidential moan --
Not mended by Mortality
Are Fabrics truly torn --
To go its convalescent way
So shameless is to see
More genuine were Perfidy
Than such Fidelity.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

The Convalescent

 .
.
.
So I walked among the willows very quietly all night; There was no moon at all, at all; no timid star alight; There was no light at all, at all; I wint from tree to tree, And I called him as his mother called, but he nivver answered me.
Oh I called him all the night-time, as I walked the wood alone; And I listened and I listened, but I nivver heard a moan; Then I found him at the dawnin', when the sorry sky was red: I was lookin' for the livin', but I only found the dead.
Sure I know that it was Shamus by the silver cross he wore; But the bugles they were callin', and I heard the cannon roar.
Oh I had no time to tarry, so I said a little prayer, And I clasped his hands together, and I left him lyin' there.
Now the birds are singin', singin', and I'm home in Donegal, And it's Springtime, and I'm thinkin' that I only dreamed it all; I dreamed about that evil wood, all crowded with its dead, Where I knelt beside me brother when the battle-dawn was red.
Where I prayed beside me brother ere I wint to fight anew: Such dreams as these are evil dreams; I can't believe it's true.
Where all is love and laughter, sure it's hard to think of loss .
.
.
But mother's sayin' nothin', and she clasps -- a silver cross.

Book: Shattered Sighs