Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Iciness Poems

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

Search and read the best famous Iciness poems, articles about Iciness poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Iciness poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Paul Laurence Dunbar | Create an image from this poem

The Made to Order Smile

 When a woman looks up at you with a twist about her eyes, 
And her brows are half uplifted in a nicely feigned surprise 
As you breathe some pretty sentence, though she hates you all the while, 
She is very apt to stun you with a made to order smile.
It's a sublte combination of a sneer and a caress, With a dash of warmth thrown in to relieve its iciness, And she greets you when she meets you with that look as if a file Had been used to fix and fashion out the made to order smile.
I confess that I'm eccentric and am not a woman's man, For they seem to be constructed on the bunko fakir plan, And it somehow sets me thinking that her heart is full of guile When a woman looks up at me with a made to order smile.
Now, all maidens, young and aged, hear the lesson I would teach: Ye who meet us in the ballroom, ye who meet us at the beach, Pray consent to try and charm us by some other sort of wile And relieve us from the burden of that made to order smile.


Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Babette

 My Lady is dancing so lightly,
The belle of the Embassy Ball;
I lied as I kissed her politely,
And hurried away from it all.
I'm taxiing up to Montmartre, With never a pang of regret, To toy for awhile with the garter Of her whom I know as Babette.
My Lady's an exquisite creature, As rare as a queen on a throne; She's faultless in form and in feature, But oh, she is cold as a stone.
And so from her presence I hurry, Her iciness quick to forget In sensuous joy as I bury My face in the breast of Babette.
She's only a flower of the pavement; With Paris and Spring in her eyes; Yet I who foresaw what the grave meant Of passion behold with surprise, When she greets me as gay as a linnet, Afar from life's fever and fret I'm twenty years younger the minute I enter the room of Babette.
The poor little supper she offers Is more than a banquet to me; A different bif-tik she proffers, Pommes frit and a morsel of Brie; We finish with coffee and kisses, Then sit on the sofa and pet .
.
.
At the Embassy Mumm never misses, But pinard's my drink with Babette.
Somehow and somewhere to my thinking, There's a bit of apache in us all; In bistros I'd rather be drinking, Than dance at the Embassy Ball.
How often I feel I would barter My place in the social set, To roam in a moonlit Montmartre, Alone with my little Babette.
I'm no longer young and I'm greying; I'm tailored, top-hatted, kid-gloved, And though in dark ways i be straying, It's heaven to love and beloved; The passion of youth to re-capture.
.
.
.
My Lady's perfection and yet When I kiss her I think of the rapture I find in the charms of Babette - Entwined in the arms of Babettte.

Book: Shattered Sighs