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Best Famous Dyeing Poems

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

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Written by R S Thomas | Create an image from this poem

Welsh Landscape

 To live in Wales is to be conscious
At dusk of the spilled blood
That went into the making of the wild sky,
Dyeing the immaculate rivers
In all their courses.
It is to be aware, Above the noisy tractor And hum of the machine Of strife in the strung woods, Vibrant with sped arrows.
You cannot live in the present, At least not in Wales.
There is the language for instance, The soft consonants Strange to the ear.
There are cries in the dark at night As owls answer the moon, And thick ambush of shadows, Hushed at the fields' corners.
There is no present in Wales, And no future; There is only the past, Brittle with relics, Wind-bitten towers and castles With sham ghosts; Mouldering quarries and mines; And an impotent people, Sick with inbreeding, Worrying the carcase of an old song.
To live in Wales is to be conscious At dusk of the spilled blood That went into the making of the wild sky, Dyeing the immaculate rivers In all their courses.
It is to be aware, Above the noisy tractor And hum of the machine Of strife in the strung woods, Vibrant with sped arrows.
You cannot live in the present, At least not in Wales.
There is the language for instance, The soft consonants Strange to the ear.
There are cries in the dark at night As owls answer the moon, And thick ambush of shadows, Hushed at the fields' corners.
There is no present in Wales, And no future; There is only the past, Brittle with relics, Wind-bitten towers and castles With sham ghosts; Mouldering quarries and mines; And an impotent people, Sick with inbreeding, Worrying the carcase of an old song.


Written by Stevie Smith | Create an image from this poem

Sunt Leones

 The lions who ate the Christians on the sands of the arena
By indulging native appetites played was now been seen a
Not entirely negligible part
In consolidating at the very start
The position of the Early Christian Church.
Initiatory rights are always bloody In the lions, it appears From contemporary art, made a study Of dyeing Coliseum sands a ruddy Liturgically sacrificial hue And if the Christians felt a little blue- Will people being eaten often do.
Theirs was the death, and there's was a crown undying, A state of things which must be satisfying.
My point which up to this has been obscured Is that it was the lions who procured By chewing up blood gristle flesh and bone The martyrdoms on which the church has grown.
I only write this poem because I thought it rather looked As if the part the lions played was being overlooked.
By lions' jaws great benefits and blessings were begotten And so our debt to Lionhood must never be forgotten.
Written by Ben Jonson | Create an image from this poem

To the Reader

 As you read, a white bear leisurely
pees, dyeing the snow
saffron,

and as you read, many gods
lie among lianas: eyes of obsidian
are watching the generations of leaves,

and as you read
the sea is turning its dark pages,
turning
its dark pages.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things