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Best Famous Coverlet Poems

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

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Written by Stephen Vincent Benet | Create an image from this poem

The White Peacock

 (France -- Ancient Regime.) 

I.

Go away! 
Go away; I will not confess to you! 
His black biretta clings like a hangman's cap; under his twitching fingers the beads shiver and click, 
As he mumbles in his corner, the shadow deepens upon him; 
I will not confess! . . . 

Is he there or is it intenser shadow? 
Dark huddled coilings from the obscene depths, 
Black, formless shadow, 
Shadow. 
Doors creak; from secret parts of the chateau come the scuffle and worry of rats. 

Orange light drips from the guttering candles, 
Eddying over the vast embroideries of the bed 
Stirring the monstrous tapestries, 
Retreating before the sable impending gloom of the canopy 
With a swift thrust and sparkle of gold, 
Lipping my hands, 
Then 
Rippling back abashed before the ominous silences 
Like the swift turns and starts of an overpowered fencer 
Who sees before him Horror 
Behind him darkness, 
Shadow. 

The clock jars and strikes, a thin, sudden note like the sob of a child. 
Clock, buhl clock that ticked out the tortuous hours of my birth, 
Clock, evil, wizened dwarf of a clock, how many years of agony have you relentlessly measured, 
Yardstick of my stifling shroud? 

I am Aumaury de Montreuil; once quick, soon to be eaten of worms. 
You hear, Father? Hsh, he is asleep in the night's cloak. 

Over me too steals sleep. 
Sleep like a white mist on the rotting paintings of cupids and gods on the ceiling; 
Sleep on the carven shields and knots at the foot of the bed, 
Oozing, blurring outlines, obliterating colors, 
Death. 

Father, Father, I must not sleep! 
It does not hear -- that shadow crouched in the corner . . . 
Is it a shadow? 
One might think so indeed, save for the calm face, yellow as wax, that lifts like the face of a drowned man from the choking darkness. 


II.

Out of the drowsy fog my body creeps back to me. 
It is the white time before dawn. 
Moonlight, watery, pellucid, lifeless, ripples over the world. 
The grass beneath it is gray; the stars pale in the sky. 
The night dew has fallen; 
An infinity of little drops, crystals from which all light has been taken, 
Glint on the sighing branches. 
All is purity, without color, without stir, without passion. 

Suddenly a peacock screams. 

My heart shocks and stops; 
Sweat, cold corpse-sweat 
Covers my rigid body. 
My hair stands on end. I cannot stir. I cannot speak. 
It is terror, terror that is walking the pale sick gardens 
And the eyeless face no man may see and live! 
Ah-h-h-h-h! 
Father, Father, wake! wake and save me! 
In his corner all is shadow. 

Dead things creep from the ground. 
It is so long ago that she died, so long ago! 
Dust crushes her, earth holds her, mold grips her. 
Fiends, do you not know that she is dead? . . . 
"Let us dance the pavon!" she said; the waxlights glittered like swords on the polished floor. 
Twinkling on jewelled snuffboxes, beaming savagely from the crass gold of candelabra, 
From the white shoulders of girls and the white powdered wigs of men . . . 
All life was that dance. 
The mocking, resistless current, 
The beauty, the passion, the perilous madness -- 
As she took my hand, released it and spread her dresses like petals, 
Turning, swaying in beauty, 
A lily, bowed by the rain, -- 
Moonlight she was, and her body of moonlight and foam, 
And her eyes stars. 
Oh the dance has a pattern! 
But the clear grace of her thrilled through the notes of the viols, 
Tremulous, pleading, escaping, immortal, untamed, 
And, as we ended, 
She blew me a kiss from her hand like a drifting white blossom -- 
And the starshine was gone; and she fled like a bird up the stair. 

Underneath the window a peacock screams, 
And claws click, scrape 
Like little lacquered boots on the rough stone. 

Oh the long fantasy of the kiss; the ceaseless hunger, ceaselessly, divinely appeased! 
The aching presence of the beloved's beauty! 
The wisdom, the incense, the brightness! 

Once more on the ice-bright floor they danced the pavon 
But I turned to the garden and her from the lighted candles. 
Softly I trod the lush grass between the black hedges of box. 
Softly, for I should take her unawares and catch her arms, 
And embrace her, dear and startled. 

By the arbor all the moonlight flowed in silver 
And her head was on his breast. 
She did not scream or shudder 
When my sword was where her head had lain 
In the quiet moonlight; 
But turned to me with one pale hand uplifted, 
All her satins fiery with the starshine, 
Nacreous, shimmering, weeping, iridescent, 
Like the quivering plumage of a peacock . . . 
Then her head drooped and I gripped her hair, 
Oh soft, scented cloud across my fingers! -- 
Bending her white neck back. . . . 

Blood writhed on my hands; I trod in blood. . . . 
Stupidly agaze 
At that crumpled heap of silk and moonlight, 
Where like twitching pinions, an arm twisted, 
Palely, and was still 
As the face of chalk. 

The buhl clock strikes. 
Thirty years. Christ, thirty years! 
Agony. Agony. 

Something stirs in the window, 
Shattering the moonlight. 
White wings fan. 
Father, Father! 

All its plumage fiery with the starshine, 
Nacreous, shimmering, weeping, iridescent, 
It drifts across the floor and mounts the bed, 
To the tap of little satin shoes. 
Gazing with infernal eyes. 
Its quick beak thrusting, rending, devil's crimson . . . 
Screams, great tortured screams shake the dark canopy. 
The light flickers, the shadow in the corner stirs; 
The wax face lifts; the eyes open. 

A thin trickle of blood worms darkly against the vast red coverlet and spreads to a pool on the floor.


Written by Rabindranath Tagore | Create an image from this poem

When Day Is Done

 If the day is done, 
if birds sing no more, 
if the wind has flagged tired, 
then draw the veil of darkness thick upon me, 
even as thou hast wrapt the earth with the coverlet of sleep 
and tenderly closed the petals of the drooping lotus at dusk.
Written by Li Po | Create an image from this poem

A Mountain Revelry

 To wash and rinse our souls of their age-old sorrows,
We drained a hundred jugs of wine.
A splendid night it was . . . .
In the clear moonlight we were loath to go to bed,
But at last drunkenness overtook us;
And we laid ourselves down on the empty mountain,
The earth for pillow, and the great heaven for coverlet.
Written by George Herbert | Create an image from this poem

The Storm

 1

Against the stone breakwater,
Only an ominous lapping,
While the wind whines overhead,
Coming down from the mountain,
Whistling between the arbors, the winding terraces;
A thin whine of wires, a rattling and flapping of leaves,
And the small street-lamp swinging and slamming against
 the lamp pole.

Where have the people gone?
There is one light on the mountain.

2

Along the sea-wall, a steady sloshing of the swell,
The waves not yet high, but even,
Coming closer and closer upon each other;
A fine fume of rain driving in from the sea,
Riddling the sand, like a wide spray of buckshot,
The wind from the sea and the wind from the mountain contending,
Flicking the foam from the whitecaps straight upward into the darkness.

A time to go home!--
And a child's dirty shift billows upward out of an alley,
A cat runs from the wind as we do,
Between the whitening trees, up Santa Lucia,
Where the heavy door unlocks,
And our breath comes more easy--
Then a crack of thunder, and the black rain runs over us, over
The flat-roofed houses, coming down in gusts, beating
The walls, the slatted windows, driving
The last watcher indoors, moving the cardplayers closer
To their cards, their anisette.

3

We creep to our bed, and its straw mattress.
We wait; we listen.
The storm lulls off, then redoubles,
Bending the trees half-way down to the ground,
Shaking loose the last wizened oranges in the orchard,
Flattening the limber carnations.

A spider eases himself down from a swaying light-bulb,
Running over the coverlet, down under the iron bedstead.
Water roars into the cistern.

We lie closer on the gritty pillow,
Breathing heavily, hoping--
For the great last leap of the wave over the breakwater,
The flat boom on the beach of the towering sea-swell,
The sudden shudder as the jutting sea-cliff collapses,
And the hurricane drives the dead straw into the living pine-tree.
Written by Stephen Crane | Create an image from this poem

The successful man has thrust himself

 The successful man has thrust himself
Through the water of the years,
Reeking wet with mistakes --
Bloody mistakes;
Slimed with victories over the lesser,
A figure thankful on the shore of money.
Then, with the bones of fools
He buys silken banners
Limned with his triumphant face;
With the skins of wise men
He buys the trivial bows of all.
Flesh painted with marrow
Contributes a coverlet,
A coverlet for his contented slumber.
In guiltless ignorance, in ignorant guilt,
He delivered his secrets to the riven multitude.
"Thus I defended: Thus I wrought."
Complacent, smiling,
He stands heavily on the dead.
Erect on a pillar of skulls
He declaims his trampling of babes;
Smirking, fat, dripping,
He makes speech in guiltless ignorance,
Innocence.


Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

In a Castle

 I
Over the yawning chimney hangs the fog. Drip 
-- hiss -- drip -- hiss --
fall the raindrops on the oaken log which burns, and steams,
and smokes the ceiling beams. Drip -- hiss -- the rain 
never stops.

The wide, state bed shivers beneath its velvet coverlet. Above, 
dim,
in the smoke, a tarnished coronet gleams dully. Overhead 
hammers and chinks
the rain. Fearfully wails the wind down distant corridors, 
and there comes
the swish and sigh of rushes lifted off the floors. The 
arras blows sidewise
out from the wall, and then falls back again.

It is my lady's key, confided with much nice cunning, whisperingly.
He enters on a sob of wind, which gutters the candles almost to 
swaling.
The fire flutters and drops. Drip -- hiss -- the rain 
never stops.
He shuts the door. The rushes fall again to stillness 
along the floor.
Outside, the wind goes wailing.

The velvet coverlet of the wide bed is smooth and cold. Above,
in the firelight, winks the coronet of tarnished gold. The 
knight shivers
in his coat of fur, and holds out his hands to the withering flame.
She is always the same, a sweet coquette. He will wait 
for her.
How the log hisses and drips! How warm 
and satisfying will be her lips!

It is wide and cold, the state bed; but when her head lies under 
the coronet,
and her eyes are full and wet with love, and when she holds out 
her arms,
and the velvet counterpane half slips from her, and alarms
her trembling modesty, how eagerly he will leap to cover her, and 
blot himself
beneath the quilt, making her laugh and tremble.
Is it guilt to free a lady from her palsied lord, 
absent and fighting,
terribly abhorred?

He stirs a booted heel and kicks a rolling coal. His 
spur clinks
on the hearth. Overhead, the rain hammers and chinks. She 
is so pure
and whole. Only because he has her soul will she resign 
herself to him,
for where the soul has gone, the body must be given as a sign. He 
takes her
by the divine right of the only lover. He has sworn to 
fight her lord,
and wed her after. Should he be overborne, she will die 
adoring him, forlorn,
shriven by her great love.
Above, the coronet winks in the darkness. Drip 
-- hiss -- fall the raindrops.
The arras blows out from the wall, and a door bangs in a far-off 
hall.

The candles swale. In the gale the moat below plunges 
and spatters.
Will the lady lose courage and not come?
The rain claps on a loosened rafter.
Is that laughter?

The room is filled with lisps and whispers. Something 
mutters.
One candle drowns and the other gutters. Is that the 
rain
which pads and patters, is it the wind through the winding entries
which chatters?
The state bed is very cold and he is alone. How 
far from the wall
the arras is blown!

Christ's Death! It is no storm which makes these little 
chuckling sounds.
By the Great Wounds of Holy Jesus, it is his dear lady, kissing 
and
clasping someone! Through the sobbing storm he hears 
her love take form
and flutter out in words. They prick into his ears and 
stun his desire,
which lies within him, hard and dead, like frozen fire. And 
the little noise
never stops.
Drip -- hiss -- the rain drops.

He tears down the arras from before an inner chamber's bolted door.

II
The state bed shivers in the watery dawn. Drip 
-- hiss -- fall the raindrops.
For the storm never stops.
On the velvet coverlet lie two bodies, stripped 
and fair in the cold,
grey air. Drip -- hiss -- fall the blood-drops, for the 
bleeding never stops.
The bodies lie quietly. At each side of the bed, on the 
floor, is a head.
A man's on this side, a woman's on that, and the red blood oozes 
along
the rush mat.
A wisp of paper is twisted carefully into the strands 
of the dead man's hair.
It says, "My Lord: Your wife's paramour has paid with 
his life
for the high favour."
Through the lady's silver fillet is wound another 
paper. It reads,
"Most noble Lord: Your wife's misdeeds are as a double-stranded
necklace of beads. But I have engaged that, on your return,
she shall welcome you here. She will not spurn your love 
as before,
you have still the best part of her. Her blood was red, 
her body white,
they will both be here for your delight. The soul inside 
was a lump of dirt,
I have rid you of that with a spurt of my sword point. Good 
luck
to your pleasure. She will be quite complaisant, my friend, 
I wager."
The end was a splashed flourish of ink.
Hark! In the passage is heard the clink 
of armour, the tread of a heavy man.
The door bursts open and standing there, his thin hair wavering
in the glare of steely daylight, is my Lord of Clair.

Over the yawning chimney hangs the fog. Drip -- hiss 
-- drip -- hiss --
fall the raindrops. Overhead hammers and chinks the rain 
which never stops.
The velvet coverlet is sodden and wet, yet the 
roof beams are tight.
Overhead, the coronet gleams with its blackened gold, winking and 
blinking.
Among the rushes three corpses are growing cold.

III
In the castle church you may see them stand,
Two sumptuous tombs on either hand
Of the choir, my Lord's and my Lady's, grand
In sculptured filigrees. And where the transepts of the 
church expand,
A crusader, come from the Holy Land,
Lies with crossed legs and embroidered band.
The page's name became a brand
For shame. He was buried in crawling sand,
After having been burnt by royal command.
Written by James Whitcomb Riley | Create an image from this poem

Ike Waltons Prayer

 I crave, dear Lord, 
No boundless hoard 
Of gold and gear, 
Nor jewels fine, 
Nor lands, nor kine, 
Nor treasure-heaps of anything.- 
Let but a little hut be mine 
Where at the hearthstore I may hear 
The cricket sing, 
And have the shine 
Of one glad woman's eyes to make, 
For my poor sake, 
Our simple home a place divine;- 
Just the wee cot-the cricket's chirr- 
Love, and the smiling face of her. 

I pray not for 
Great riches, nor 
For vast estates, and castle-halls,- 
Give me to hear the bare footfalls 
Of children o’er 
An oaken floor, 
New-risen with sunshine, or bespread 
With but the tiny coverlet 
And pillow for the baby’s head; 
And pray Thou, may 
The door stand open and the day 
Send ever in a gentle breeze, 
With fragrance from the locust-trees, 
And drowsy moan of doves, and blur 
Of robin-chirps, and drove of bees, 
With afterhushes of the stir 
Of intermingling sounds, and then 
The good-wife and the smile of her 
Filling the silences again- 
The cricket’s call, 
And the wee cot, 
Dear Lord of all, 
Deny me not! 

I pray not that 
Men tremble at 
My power of place 
And lordly sway, - 
I only pray for simple grace 
To look my neighbor in the face 
Full honestly from day to day- 
Yield me this horny palm to hold, 
And I’ll not pray 
For gold;- 
The tanned face, garlanded with mirth, 
It hath the kingliest smile on earth- 
The swart brow, diamonded with sweat, 
Hath never need of coronet. 
And so I reach, 
Dear Lord, to Thee, 
And do beseech 
Thou givest me 
The wee cot, and the cricket’s chirr, 
Love, and the glad sweet face of her.
Written by William Butler Yeats | Create an image from this poem

Baile And Aillinn

 ARGUMENT. Baile and Aillinn were lovers, but Aengus, the
Master of Love, wishing them to he happy in his own land
among the dead, told to each a story of the other's death, so
that their hearts were broken and they died.

 I hardly hear the curlew cry,
 Nor thegrey rush when the wind is high,
 Before my thoughts begin to run
 On the heir of Uladh, Buan's son,
 Baile, who had the honey mouth;
 And that mild woman of the south,
 Aillinn, who was King Lugaidh's heir.
 Their love was never drowned in care
 Of this or that thing, nor grew cold
 Because their hodies had grown old.
 Being forbid to marry on earth,
 They blossomed to immortal mirth.

About the time when Christ was born,
When the long wars for the White Horn
And the Brown Bull had not yet come,
Young Baile Honey Mouth, whom some
Called rather Baile Little-Land,
Rode out of Emain with a band
Of harpers and young men; and they
Imagined, as they struck the way
To many-pastured Muirthemne,
That all things fell out happily,
And there, for all that fools had said,
Baile and Aillinn would be wed.

They found an old man running there:
He had ragged long grass-coloured hair;
He had knees that stuck out of his hose;
He had puddle-water in his shoes;
He had half a cloak to keep him dry,
Although he had a squirrel's eye.

O wandering hirds and rushy beds,
You put such folly in our heads
With all this crying in the wind,
No common love is to our mind,
And our poor kate or Nan is less
Than any whose unhappiness
Awoke the harp-strings long ago.
Yet they that know all things hut know
That all this life can give us is
A child's laughter, a woman's kiss.
Who was it put so great a scorn
In thegrey reeds that night and morn
Are trodden and broken hy the herds,
And in the light bodies of birds
The north wind tumbles to and fro
And pinches among hail and snow?

That runner said: 'I am from the south;
I run to Baile Honey-Mouth,
To tell him how the girl Aillinn
Rode from the country of her kin,
And old and young men rode with her:
For all that country had been astir
If anybody half as fair
Had chosen a husband anywhere
But where it could see her every day.
When they had ridden a little way
An old man caught the horse's head
With: "You must home again, and wed
With somebody in your own land."
A young man cried and kissed her hand,
"O lady, wed with one of us";
And when no face grew piteous
For any gentle thing she spake,
She fell and died of the heart-break.'
Because a lover's heart s worn out,
Being tumbled and blown about
By its own blind imagining,
And will believe that anything
That is bad enough to be true, is true,
Baile's heart was broken in two;
And he, being laid upon green boughs,
Was carried to the goodly house
Where the Hound of Uladh sat before
The brazen pillars of his door,
His face bowed low to weep the end
Of the harper's daughter and her friend
For athough years had passed away
He always wept them on that day,
For on that day they had been betrayed;
And now that Honey-Mouth is laid
Under a cairn of sleepy stone
Before his eyes, he has tears for none,
Although he is carrying stone, but two
For whom the cairn's but heaped anew.

We hold, because our memory is
Sofull of that thing and of this,
That out of sight is out of mind.
But the grey rush under the wind
And the grey bird with crooked bill
rave such long memories that they still
Remember Deirdre and her man;
And when we walk with Kate or Nan
About the windy water-side,
Our hearts can Fear the voices chide.
How could we be so soon content,
Who know the way that Naoise went?
And they have news of Deirdre's eyes,
Who being lovely was so wise -
Ah! wise, my heart knows well how wise.

Now had that old gaunt crafty one,
Gathering his cloak about him, mn
Where Aillinn rode with waiting-maids,
Who amid leafy lights and shades
Dreamed of the hands that would unlace
Their bodices in some dim place
When they had come to the matriage-bed,
And harpers, pacing with high head
As though their music were enough
To make the savage heart of love
Grow gentle without sorrowing,
Imagining and pondering
Heaven knows what calamity;

'Another's hurried off,' cried he,
'From heat and cold and wind and wave;
They have heaped the stones above his grave
In Muirthemne, and over it
In changeless Ogham letters writ -
Baile, that was of Rury's seed.
But the gods long ago decreed
No waiting-maid should ever spread
Baile and Aillinn's marriage-bed,
For they should clip and clip again
Where wild bees hive on the Great Plain.
Therefore it is but little news
That put this hurry in my shoes.'

Then seeing that he scarce had spoke
Before her love-worn heart had broke.
He ran and laughed until he came
To that high hill the herdsmen name
The Hill Seat of Laighen, because
Some god or king had made the laws
That held the land together there,
In old times among the clouds of the air.

That old man climbed; the day grew dim;
Two swans came flying up to him,
Linked by a gold chain each to each,
And with low murmuring laughing speech
Alighted on the windy grass.
They knew him: his changed body was
Tall, proud and ruddy, and light wings
Were hovering over the harp-strings
That Edain, Midhir's wife, had wove
In the hid place, being crazed by love.

What shall I call them? fish that swim,
Scale rubbing scale where light is dim
By a broad water-lily leaf;
Or mice in the one wheaten sheaf
Forgotten at the threshing-place;
Or birds lost in the one clear space
Of morning light in a dim sky;
Or, it may be, the eyelids of one eye,
Or the door-pillars of one house,
Or two sweet blossoming apple-boughs
That have one shadow on the ground;
Or the two strings that made one sound
Where that wise harper's finger ran.
For this young girl and this young man
Have happiness without an end,
Because they have made so good a friend.

They know all wonders, for they pass
The towery gates of Gorias,
And Findrias and Falias,
And long-forgotten Murias,
Among the giant kings whose hoard,
Cauldron and spear and stone and sword,
Was robbed before earth gave the wheat;
Wandering from broken street to street
They come where some huge watcher is,
And tremble with their love and kiss.

They know undying things, for they
Wander where earth withers away,
Though nothing troubles the great streams
But light from the pale stars, and gleams
From the holy orchards, where there is none
But fruit that is of precious stone,
Or apples of the sun and moon.

What were our praise to them? They eat
Quiet's wild heart, like daily meat;
Who when night thickens are afloat
On dappled skins in a glass boat,
Far out under a windless sky;
While over them birds of Aengus fly,
And over the tiller and the prow,
And waving white wings to and fro
Awaken wanderings of light air
To stir their coverlet and their hair.

And poets found, old writers say,
A yew tree where his body lay;
But a wild apple hid the grass
With its sweet blossom where hers was,
And being in good heart, because
A better time had come again
After the deaths of many men,
And that long fighting at the ford,
They wrote on tablets of thin board,
Made of the apple and the yew,
All the love stories that they knew.

Let rush and hird cry out their fill
Of the harper's daughter if they will,
Beloved, I am not afraid of her.
She is not wiser nor lovelier,
And you are more high of heart than she,
For all her wanderings over-sea;
But I'd have bird and rush forget
Those other two; for never yet
Has lover lived, but longed to wive
Like them that are no more alive.
Written by Richard Lovelace | Create an image from this poem

The Rose

 Sweet serene sky-like flower,
Haste to adorn her bower;
From thy long cloudy bed
Shoot forth thy damask head!

New-startled blush of Flora,
The grief of pale Aurora,
Who will contest no more,
Haste, haste to strew her floor!

Vermilion ball that's given
From lip to lip in heaven,
Love's couch's coverlet,
Haste, haste to make her bed!

Dear offspring of pleased Venus
And jolly plump Silenus,
Haste, haste to deck the hair
Of the only sweetly fair!

See! rosy is her bower,
Her floor is all this flower;
Her bed a rosy nest
By a bed of roses pressed.

But early as she dresses,
Why fly you her bright tresses?
Ah! I have found, I fear,— 
Because her cheeks are near.
Written by William Butler Yeats | Create an image from this poem

To A Shade

 If you have revisited the town, thin Shade,
Whether to look upon your monument
(I wonder if the builder has been paid)
Or happier-thoughted when the day is spent
To drink of that salt breath out of the sea
When grey gulls flit about instead of men,
And the gaunt houses put on majesty:
Let these content you and be gone again;
For they are at their old tricks yet.
 A man
Of your own passionate serving kind who had brought
In his full hands what, had they only known,
Had given their children's children loftier thought,
Sweeter emotion, working in their veins
Like gentle blood, has been driven from the place,
And instilt heaped upon him for his pains,
And for his open-handedness, disgrace;
Your enemy, an old fotil mouth, had set
The pack upon him.
 Go, unquiet wanderer,
And gather the Glasnevin coverlet
About your head till the dust stops your ear,
The time for you to taste of that Salt breath
And listen at the corners has not come;
You had enough of sorrow before death --
Away, away! You are safer in the tomb.

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry