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Best Famous Dabs Poems

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

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Written by Pam Ayres | Create an image from this poem

Oh, I wish I’d looked after me teeth

Oh, I wish I’d looked after me teeth,
And spotted the dangers beneath
All the toffees I chewed,
And the sweet sticky food.
Oh, I wish I’d looked after me teeth.

I wish I’d been that much more willin’
When I had more tooth there than fillin’
To give up gobstoppers,
From respect to me choppers,
And to buy something else with me shillin’.

When I think of the lollies I licked
And the liquorice allsorts I picked,
Sherbet dabs, big and little,
All that hard peanut brittle,
My conscience gets horribly pricked.

My mother, she told me no end,
‘If you got a tooth, you got a friend.’
I was young then, and careless,
My toothbrush was hairless,
I never had much time to spend.

Oh I showed them the toothpaste all right,
I flashed it about late at night,
But up-and-down brushin’
And pokin’ and fussin’
Didn’t seem worth the time – I could bite!

If I’d known I was paving the way
To cavities, caps and decay,
The murder of fillin’s,
Injections and drillin’s,
I’d have thrown all me sherbet away.

So I lie in the old dentist’s chair,
And I gaze up his nose in despair,
And his drill it do whine
In these molars of mine.
‘Two amalgam,’ he’ll say, ‘for in there.’

How I laughed at my mother’s false teeth,
As they foamed in the waters beneath.
But now comes the reckonin’
It’s methey are beckonin’
Oh, I wish I’d looked after me teeth.

Taken from the The Works: The Classic Collection 2008.

© Pam Ayres 2012
Official Website
http://pamayres.com/


Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Still Life

 COOL your heels on the rail of an observation car.
Let the engineer open her up for ninety miles an hour.
Take in the prairie right and left, rolling land and new hay crops, swaths of new hay laid in the sun.
A gray village flecks by and the horses hitched in front of the post-office never blink an eye.
A barnyard and fifteen Holstein cows, dabs of white on a black wall map, never blink an eye.
A signalman in a tower, the outpost of Kansas City, keeps his place at a window with the serenity of a bronze statue on a dark night when lovers pass whispering.
Written by Robert Lowell | Create an image from this poem

Home After Three Months Away

 Gone now the baby's nurse,
a lioness who ruled the roost
and made the Mother cry.
She used to tie gobbets of porkrind to bowknots of gauze— three months they hung like soggy toast on our eight foot magnolia tree, and helped the English sparrows weather a Boston winter.
Three months, three months! Is Richard now himself again? Dimpled with exaltation, my daughter holds her levee in the tub.
Our noses rub, each of us pats a stringy lock of hair— they tell me nothing's gone.
Though I am forty-one, not fourty now, the time I put away was child's play.
After thirteen weeks my child still dabs her cheeks to start me shaving.
When we dress her in her sky-blue corduroy, she changes to a boy, and floats my shaving brush and washcloth in the flush.
.
.
Dearest I cannot loiter here in lather like a polar bear.
Recuperating, I neither spin nor toil.
Three stories down below, a choreman tends our coffin length of soil, and seven horizontal tulips blow.
Just twelve months ago, these flowers were pedigreed imported Dutchmen, now no one need distunguish them from weed.
Bushed by the late spring snow, they cannot meet another year's snowballing enervation.
I keep no rank nor station.
Cured, I am frizzled, stale and small.
"
Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Throwbacks

 SOMEWHERE you and I remember we came.
Stairways from the sea and our heads dripping.
Ladders of dust and mud and our hair snarled.
Rags of drenching mist and our hands clawing, climbing.
You and I that snickered in the crotches and corners, in the gab of our first talking.
Red dabs of dawn summer mornings and the rain sliding off our shoulders summer afternoons.
Was it you and I yelled songs and songs in the nights of big yellow moons?

Book: Reflection on the Important Things