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Best Famous Diaper Poems

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

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Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

For God While Sleeping

 Sleeping in fever, I am unfair
to know just who you are:
hung up like a pig on exhibit,
the delicate wrists,
the beard drooling blood and vinegar;
hooked to your own weight,
jolting toward death under your nameplate.
Everyone in this crowd needs a bath.
I am dressed in rags.
The mother wears blue.
You grind your teeth and with each new breath your jaws gape and your diaper sags.
I am not to blame for all this.
I do not know your name.
Skinny man, you are somebody's fault.
You ride on dark poles -- a wooden bird that a trader built for some fool who felt that he could make the flight.
Now you roll in your sleep, seasick on your own breathing, poor old convict.


Written by Robert Herrick | Create an image from this poem

FAREWELL FROST OR WELCOME SPRING

 Fled are the frosts, and now the fields appear
Reclothed in fresh and verdant diaper;
Thaw'd are the snows; and now the lusty Spring
Gives to each mead a neat enamelling;
The palms put forth their gems, and every tree
Now swaggers in her leafy gallantry.
The while the Daulian minstrel sweetly sings With warbling notes her Terean sufferings.
--What gentle winds perspire! as if here Never had been the northern plunderer To strip the trees and fields, to their distress, Leaving them to a pitied nakedness.
And look how when a frantic storm doth tear A stubborn oak or holm, long growing there,-- But lull'd to calmness, then succeeds a breeze That scarcely stirs the nodding leaves of trees; So when this war, which tempest-like doth spoil Our salt, our corn, our honey, wine, and oil, Falls to a temper, and doth mildly cast His inconsiderate frenzy off, at last, The gentle dove may, when these turmoils cease, Bring in her bill, once more, the branch of Peace.

Book: Shattered Sighs