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Best Famous Francesca Poems

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

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Written by John Keats | Create an image from this poem

A Dream After Reading Dantes Episode Of Paolo And Francesca

 As Hermes once took to his feathers light,
When lulled Argus, baffled, swooned and slept,
So on a Delphic reed, my idle spright
So played, so charmed, so conquered, so bereft
The dragon-world of all its hundred eyes;
And seeing it asleep, so fled away,
Not to pure Ida with its snow-cold skies,
Nor unto Tempe, where Jove grieved a day;
But to that second circle of sad Hell,
Where in the gust, the whirlwind, and the flaw
Of rain and hail-stones, lovers need not tell
Their sorrows.
Pale were the sweet lips I saw, Pale were the lips I kissed, and fair the form I floated with, about that melancholy storm.


Written by Ezra Pound | Create an image from this poem

Francesca

 You came in out of the night
And there were flowers in your hand,
Now you will come out of a confusion of people,
Out of a turmoil of speech about you.
I who have seen you amid the primal things Was angry when they spoke your name IN ordinary places.
I would that the cool waves might flow over my mind, And that the world should dry as a dead leaf, Or as a dandelion see-pod and be swept away, So that I might find you again, Alone.
Written by Edwin Arlington Robinson | Create an image from this poem

Nimmo

 Since you remember Nimmo, and arrive 
At such a false and florid and far drawn 
Confusion of odd nonsense, I connive 
No longer, though I may have led you on.
So much is told and heard and told again, So many with his legend are engrossed, That I, more sorry now than I was then, May live on to be sorry for his ghost.
You knew him, and you must have known his eyes,— How deep they were, and what a velvet light Came out of them when anger or surprise, Or laughter, or Francesca, made them bright.
No, you will not forget such eyes, I think,— And you say nothing of them.
Very well.
I wonder if all history’s worth a wink, Sometimes, or if my tale be one to tell.
For they began to lose their velvet light; Their fire grew dead without and small within; And many of you deplored the needless fight That somewhere in the dark there must have been.
All fights are needless, when they’re not our own, But Nimmo and Francesca never fought.
Remember that; and when you are alone, Remember me—and think what I have thought.
Now, mind you, I say nothing of what was, Or never was, or could or could not be: Bring not suspicion’s candle to the glass That mirrors a friend’s face to memory.
Of what you see, see all,—but see no more; For what I show you here will not be there.
The devil has had his way with paint before, And he’s an artist,—and you needn’t stare.
There was a painter and he painted well: He’d paint you Daniel in the lion’s den, Beelzebub, Elaine, or William Tell.
I’m coming back to Nimmo’s eyes again.
The painter put the devil in those eyes, Unless the devil did, and there he stayed; And then the lady fled from paradise, And there’s your fact.
The lady was afraid.
She must have been afraid, or may have been, Of evil in their velvet all the while; But sure as I’m a sinner with a skin, I’ll trust the man as long as he can smile.
I trust him who can smile and then may live In my heart’s house, where Nimmo is today.
God knows if I have more than men forgive To tell him; but I played, and I shall pay.
I knew him then, and if I know him yet, I know in him, defeated and estranged, The calm of men forbidden to forget The calm of women who have loved and changed.
But there are ways that are beyond our ways, Or he would not be calm and she be mute, As one by one their lost and empty days Pass without even the warmth of a dispute.
God help us all when women think they see; God save us when they do.
I’m fair; but though I know him only as he looks to me, I know him,—and I tell Francesca so.
And what of Nimmo? Little would you ask Of him, could you but see him as I can, At his bewildered and unfruitful task Of being what he was born to be—a man.
Better forget that I said anything Of what your tortured memory may disclose; I know him, and your worst remembering Would count as much as nothing, I suppose.
Meanwhile, I trust him; and I know his way Of trusting me, and always in his youth.
I’m painting here a better man, you say, Than I, the painter; and you say the truth.
Written by Jorie Graham | Create an image from this poem

San Sepolcro

 In this blue light
 I can take you there,
snow having made me
 a world of bone
seen through to.
This is my house, my section of Etruscan wall, my neighbor's lemontrees, and, just below the lower church, the airplane factory.
A rooster crows all day from mist outside the walls.
There's milk on the air, ice on the oily lemonskins.
How clean the mind is, holy grave.
It is this girl by Piero della Francesca, unbuttoning her blue dress, her mantle of weather, to go into labor.
Come, we can go in.
It is before the birth of god.
No one has risen yet to the museums, to the assembly line--bodies and wings--to the open air market.
This is what the living do: go in.
It's a long way.
And the dress keeps opening from eternity to privacy, quickening.
Inside, at the heart, is tragedy, the present moment forever stillborn, but going in, each breath is a button coming undone, something terribly nimble-fingered finding all of the stops.
Written by Edna St Vincent Millay | Create an image from this poem

Sonnets 01: We Talk Of Taxes And I Call You Friend

 We talk of taxes, and I call you friend;
Well, such you are,—but well enough we know
How thick about us root, how rankly grow
Those subtle weeds no man has need to tend,
That flourish through neglect, and soon must send
Perfume too sweet upon us and overthrow
Our steady senses; how such matters go
We are aware, and how such matters end.
Yet shall be told no meagre passion here; With lovers such as we forevermore Isolde drinks the draught, and Guinevere Receives the Table's ruin through her door, Francesca, with the loud surf at her ear, Lets fall the colored book upon the floor.



Book: Shattered Sighs