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Best Famous Cornucopia Poems

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

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Written by Anthony Hecht | Create an image from this poem

Curriculum Vitae

 1992

1) I was born in a Free City, near the North Sea.
2) In the year of my birth, money was shredded into confetti.
A loaf of bread cost a million marks.
Of course I do not remember this.
3) Parents and grandparents hovered around me.
The world I lived in had a soft voice and no claws.
4) A cornucopia filled with treats took me into a building with bells.
A wide-bosomed teacher took me in.
5) At home the bookshelves connected heaven and earth.
6) On Sundays the city child waded through pinecones and primrose marshes, a short train ride away.
7) My country was struck by history more deadly than earthquakes or hurricanes.
8) My father was busy eluding the monsters.
My mother told me the walls had ears.
I learned the burden of secrets.
9) I moved into the too bright days, the too dark nights of adolescence.
10) Two parents, two daughters, we followed the sun and the moon across the ocean.
My grandparents stayed behind in darkness.
11) In the new language everyone spoke too fast.
Eventually I caught up with them.
12) When I met you, the new language became the language of love.
13) The death of the mother hurt the daughter into poetry.
The daughter became a mother of daughters.
14) Ordinary life: the plenty and thick of it.
Knots tying threads to everywhere.
The past pushed away, the future left unimagined for the sake of the glorious, difficult, passionate present.
15) Years and years of this.
16) The children no longer children.
An old man's pain, an old man's loneliness.
17) And then my father too disappeared.
18) I tried to go home again.
I stood at the door to my childhood, but it was closed to the public.
19) One day, on a crowded elevator, everyone's face was younger than mine.
20) So far, so good.
The brilliant days and nights are breathless in their hurry.
We follow, you and I.


Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

The Colossus

 I shall never get you put together entirely,
Pieced, glued, and properly jointed.
Mule-bray, pig-grunt and bawdy cackles Proceed from your great lips.
It's worse than a barnyard.
Perhaps you consider yourself an oracle, Mouthpiece of the dead, or of some god or other.
Thirty years now I have labored To dredge the silt from your throat.
I am none the wiser.
Scaling little ladders with glue pots and pails of Lysol I crawl like an ant in mourning Over the weedy acres of your brow To mend the immense skull-plates and clear The bald, white tumuli of your eyes.
A blue sky out of the Oresteia Arches above us.
O father, all by yourself You are pithy and historical as the Roman Forum.
I open my lunch on a hill of black cypress.
Your fluted bones and acanthine hair are littered In their old anarchy to the horizon-line.
It would take more than a lightning-stroke To create such a ruin.
Nights, I squat in the cornucopia Of your left ear, out of the wind, Counting the red stars and those of plum-color.
The sun rises under the pillar of your tongue.
My hours are married to shadow.
No longer do I listen for the scrape of a keel On the blank stones of the landing.
Written by Thomas Lux | Create an image from this poem

Unlike For Example The Sound Of A Riptooth Saw

 gnawing through a shinbone, a high howl
inside of which a bloody, slashed-by-growls note
is heard, unlike that
sound, and instead, its opposite: a barely sounded
sound (put your nuclear ears
on for it, your giant hearing horn, its cornucopia mouth
wide) -- a slippery whoosh of rain
sliding down a mirror
leaned against a windfallen tree stump, the sound
a child's head makes
falling against his mother's breast,
or the sound, from a mile away, as the town undertaker
lets Grammy's wrist
slip from his grip
and fall to the shiny table.
And, if you turn your head just right and open all your ears, you might hear this finest sound, this lost sound: a plow's silvery prow cleaving the earth (your finger dragging through milk, a razor cutting silk) like a clipper ship cuts the sea.
If you do hear this sound, then follow it with your ear and also your eye as it and the tractor that pulls it disappear over a hill until it is no sound at all, until it comes back over the hill again, again dragging its furrow, its ground-rhythm, its wide open throat, behind it.
Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Pheasant

 You said you would kill it this morning.
Do not kill it.
It startles me still, The jut of that odd, dark head, pacing Through the uncut grass on the elm's hill.
It is something to own a pheasant, Or just to be visited at all.
I am not mystical: it isn't As if I thought it had a spirit.
It is simply in its element.
That gives it a kingliness, a right.
The print of its big foot last winter, The trail-track, on the snow in our court The wonder of it, in that pallor, Through crosshatch of sparrow and starling.
Is it its rareness, then? It is rare.
But a dozen would be worth having, A hundred, on that hill-green and red, Crossing and recrossing: a fine thing! It is such a good shape, so vivid.
It's a little cornucopia.
It unclaps, brown as a leaf, and loud, Settles in the elm, and is easy.
It was sunning in the narcissi.
I trespass stupidly.
Let be, let be.

Book: Shattered Sighs