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Best Famous Freestone Poems

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

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Written by John Betjeman | Create an image from this poem

Westgate-On-Sea

 Hark, I hear the bells of Westgate,
I will tell you what they sigh,
Where those minarets and steeples
Prick the open Thanet sky.
Happy bells of eighteen-ninety, Bursting from your freestone tower! Recalling laurel, shrubs and privet, Red geraniums in flower.
Feet that scamper on the asphalt Through the Borough Council grass, Till they hide inside the shelter Bright with ironwork and glass, Striving chains of ordered children Purple by the sea-breeze made, Striving on to prunes and suet Past the shops on the Parade.
Some with wire around their glasses, Some with wire across their teeth, Writhing frames for running noses And the drooping lip beneath.
Church of England bells of Westgate! On this balcony I stand, White the woodwork wriggles round me, Clocktowers rise on either hand.
For me in my timber arbour You have one more message yet, "Plimsolls, plimsolls in the summer, Oh galoshes in the wet!"


Written by Philip Levine | Create an image from this poem

The New World

 A man roams the streets with a basket
of freestone peaches hollering, "Peaches,
peaches, yellow freestone peaches for sale.
" My grandfather in his prime could outshout the Tigers of Wrath or the factory whistles along the river.
Hamtramck hungered for yellow freestone peaches, downriver wakened from a dream of work, Zug Island danced into the bright day glad to be alive.
Full-figured women in their negligees streamed into the streets from the dark doorways to demand in Polish or Armenian the ripened offerings of this new world.
Josef Prisckulnick out of Dubrovitsa to Detroit by way of Ellis Island raised himself regally to his full height of five feet two and transacted until the fruit was gone into those eager hands.
Thus would there be a letter sent across an ocean and a continent, and thus would Sadie waken to the news of wealth without limit in the bright and distant land, and thus bags were packed and she set sail for America.
Some of this is true.
The women were gaunt.
All day the kids dug in the back lots searching for anything.
The place was Russia with another name.
Joe was five feet two.
Dubrovitsa burned to gray ashes the west wind carried off, then Rovno went, then the Dnieper turned to dust.
We sat around the table telling lies while the late light filled an empty glass.
Bread, onions, the smell of burning butter, small white potatoes we shared with no one because the hour was wrong, the guest was late, and this was Michigan in 1928.

Book: Shattered Sighs