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Best Famous Glittery Poems

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

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Written by Maria Mazziotti Gillan | Create an image from this poem

THE MOMENT I KNEW MY LIFE HAD CHANGED

 It was not until later
that I knew, recognized the moment
for what it was, my life before it,
a gray landscape, shapeless and misty;
my life after, flowering full and leafy
as the cherry trees that only today
have torn into bloom.
Imagine: my cousin at 19, tall, slender.
She worked in New York City.
For my thirteenth birthday she took me to New York.
We ate at the Russian Tea Room where I was uncertain about which fork to use, intimidated by the women in their hats and furs, by the waiters who watched me as I struggled with the huge hunk of bread in the center of the onion soup in its steep bowl.
When we were ready to leave, I tried to give the tip back to my cousin.
I thought she had forgotten it.
She said, "No, it's for the waiter!" On 57th Street a man in a camel coat bumped into me, rushed on by.
My cousin said, "That was Eddie Fisher," but I said, "He's too short.
It can't be.
" I felt let down that Eddie Fisher, the star I was in love with that year, was so rude he never even said "excuse me.
" Then we went into the theater sat in the front row.
the stage sprang into colored light, and the glittery costumes, the singing, the magical story, drew me in, made me feel in that moment, that I would learn again and again, the miraculous language, the music of it.
My life, turning away from the constricted world of the 19th Street tenement, formed a line almost perpendicular to that old life, I moved toward it, breathed in this new air, racing toward a world filled with poems and music and books that freed me from everything that could have chained me to the ground.
Copyright © by Maria Mazziotti Gillan


Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Sleep In The Mojave Desert

 Out here there are no hearthstones,
Hot grains, simply.
It is dry, dry.
And the air dangerous.
Noonday acts queerly On the mind's eye erecting a line Of poplars in the middle distance, the only Object beside the mad, straight road One can remember men and houses by.
A cool wind should inhabit these leaves And a dew collect on them, dearer than money, In the blue hour before sunup.
Yet they recede, untouchable as tomorrow, Or those glittery fictions of spilt water That glide ahead of the very thirsty.
I think of the lizards airing their tongues In the crevice of an extremely small shadow And the toad guarding his heart's droplet.
The desert is white as a blind man's eye, Comfortless as salt.
Snake and bird Doze behind the old maskss of fury.
We swelter like firedogs in the wind.
The sun puts its cinder out.
Where we lie The heat-cracked crickets congregate In their black armorplate and cry.
The day-moon lights up like a sorry mother, And the crickets come creeping into our hair To fiddle the short night away.

Book: Shattered Sighs