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Best Famous Dark Haired Poems

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

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Written by Robinson Jeffers | Create an image from this poem

Now Returned Home

 Beyond the narrows of the Inner Hebrides
We sailed the cold angry sea toward Barra, where Heaval mountain
Lifts like a mast. There were few people on the steamer, it was late in the
 year; I noticed most an old shepherd,
Two wise-eyed dogs wove anxious circles around his feet, and a thin-armed
 girl 
Who cherished what seemed a doll, wrapping it against the sea-wind. When
 it moved I said to my wife "She'll smother it."
And she to the girl: "Is your baby cold? You'd better run down out of the
 wind and uncover its face."
She raised the shawl and said "He is two weeks old. His mother died in
 Glasgow in the hospital
Where he was born. She was my sister." I looked ahead at the bleak island,
 gray stones, ruined castle,
A few gaunt houses under the high and comfortless mountain; my wife
 looked at the sickly babe,
And said "There's a good doctor in Barra? It will soon be winter." "Ah,"
 she answered, "Barra'd be heaven for him,
The poor wee thing, there's Heaval to break the wind. We live on a wee
 island yonder away,
Just the one house."

   The steamer moored, and a skiff—what they call a
 curragh, like a canvas canoe
Equipped with oars—came swiftly along the side. The dark-haired girl
 climbed down to it, with one arm holding
That doubtful slip of life to her breast; a tall young man with sea-pale eyes
 and an older man
Helped her; if a word was spoken I did not hear it. They stepped a mast
 and hoisted a henna-color
Bat's wing of sail.

   Now, returned home
After so many thousands of miles of road and ocean, all the hulls sailed in,
 the houses visited,
I remember that slender skiff with dark henna sail
Bearing off across the stormy sunset to the distant island
Most clearly; and have rather forgotten the dragging whirlpools of London,
 The screaming haste of New York.


Written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow | Create an image from this poem

Burial of the Minnisink

 On sunny slope and beechen swell,
The shadowed light of evening fell;
And, where the maple's leaf was brown,
With soft and silent lapse came down,
The glory, that the wood receives,
At sunset, in its golden leaves.

Far upward in the mellow light
Rose the blue hills. One cloud of white,
Around a far uplifted cone,
In the warm blush of evening shone;
An image of the silver lakes,
By which the Indian's soul awakes.

But soon a funeral hymn was heard
Where the soft breath of evening stirred
The tall, gray forest; and a band
Of stern in heart, and strong in hand,
Came winding down beside the wave,
To lay the red chief in his grave.

They sang, that by his native bowers
He stood, in the last moon of flowers,
And thirty snows had not yet shed
Their glory on the warrior's head;
But, as the summer fruit decays,
So died he in those naked days.

A dark cloak of the roebuck's skin
Covered the warrior, and within
Its heavy folds the weapons, made
For the hard toils of war, were laid;
The cuirass, woven of plaited reeds,
And the broad belt of shells and beads.

Before, a dark-haired virgin train
Chanted the death dirge of the slain;
Behind, the long procession came
Of hoary men and chiefs of fame,
With heavy hearts, and eyes of grief,
Leading the war-horse of their chief.

Stripped of his proud and martial dress,
Uncurbed, unreined, and riderless,
With darting eye, and nostril spread,
And heavy and impatient tread,
He came; and oft that eye so proud
Asked for his rider in the crowd.

They buried the dark chief; they freed
Beside the grave his battle steed;
And swift an arrow cleaved its way
To his stern heart! One piercing neigh
Arose, and, on the dead man's plain,
The rider grasps his steed again.
Written by Walter de la Mare | Create an image from this poem

Arabia

 Far are the shades of Arabia, 
Where the Princes ride at noon, 
'Mid the verdurous vales and thickets, 
Under the ghost of the moon; 
And so dark is that vaulted purple 
Flowers in the forest rise 
And toss into blossom 'gainst the phantom stars 
Pale in the noonday skies. 

Sweet is the music of Arabia 
In my heart, when out of dreams 
I still in the thin clear mirk of dawn 
Descry her gliding streams; 
Hear her strange lutes on the green banks 
Ring loud with the grief and delight 
Of the dim-silked, dark-haired Musicians 
In the brooding silence of night. 

They haunt me -- her lutes and her forests; 
No beauty on earth I see 
But shadowed with that dream recalls 
Her loveliness to me: 
Still eyes look coldly upon me, 
Cold voices whisper and say -- 
'He is crazed with the spell of far Arabia, 
They have stolen his wits away.'
Written by Jennifer Reeser | Create an image from this poem

Sapphics For Celebrity

 In my dream, Celebrity, four pianos
scored the room, and you -- on an antique sofa
near two dark-haired innocents -- asked that I play
something immortal.

Dust motes grayed the air, and a sage-green shadow
draped the walls in color like sifted powder.
I agreed, but wandered, untold, too many
keys to consider.
Written by Barry Tebb | Create an image from this poem

The Prism

 Through the windows the sun’s light

Turns to amber, the moon’s to jade;

All night long I lie awake, wondering

How much your stunned heart can take.

That moment’s ‘sudden interminable splendour’,

Our love kept up through the years of stress,

Strange dark-haired creature, the light over the water

Burns and beckons through our emptiness.


Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Testimony Regarding a Ghost

 THE ROSES slanted crimson sobs
On the night sky hair of the women,
And the long light-fingered men
Spoke to the dark-haired women,
“Nothing lovelier, nothing lovelier.”
How could he sit there among us all
Guzzling blood into his guts,
Goblets, mugs, buckets—
Leaning, toppling, laughing
With a slobber on his mouth,
A smear of red on his strong raw lips,
How could he sit there
And only two or three of us see him?
 There was nothing to it.
He wasn’t there at all, of course.

 The roses leaned from the pots.
The sprays snot roses gold and red
And the roses slanted crimson sobs
 In the night sky hair
And the voices chattered on the way
To the frappe, speaking of pictures,
Speaking of a strip of black velvet
Crossing a girlish woman’s throat,
Speaking of the mystic music flash
Of pots and sprays of roses,
“Nothing lovelier, nothing lovelier.”

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry