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Best Famous Idled Poems

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

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Written by Norman Dubie | Create an image from this poem

At Corfu

 In seventeen hundred, a much hated sultan
visited us twice, finally
dying of headaches in the south harbor.

Ever since, visitors have come to the island.
They bring their dogs and children.

The ferry boat with a red cross
freshly painted on it
lifts in uneven drafts of smoke and steam
devising the mustard horizon
that is grotesque with purple thunderheads.

In the rising winds the angry sea birds
circle the trafficking winter ghosts
who are electric like the locusts at Patmos.

They are gathering sage in improvised slings
along the hillsides,
they are the lightning strikes scattering wild cats
from the bone yard:
here, since the war, fertilizer trucks
have idled much like the island itself.

We blame the wild cats who have eaten
all the jeweled yellow snakes of the island.

When sufficiently distant, the outhouses have a sweetness
like frankincense.

A darker congregation, we think the last days
began when they stripped the postage stamps
of their lies and romance.

The chaff of the hillsides
rises like a cramp, defeating a paring of moon . . . its
hot, modest conjunction of planets . . . 

And with this sudden hard rain
the bells on the ferry boat
begin a long elicit angelus.

Two small Turkish boys run out into the storm--
here, by superstition,
they must laugh and sing--like condemned lovers,

ashen and kneeling,
who are being washed

by their dead grandmothers' grandmothers.


Written by Lucy Maud Montgomery | Create an image from this poem

On the Hills

 Through the pungent hours of the afternoon,
On the autumn slopes we have lightly wandered 
Where the sunshine lay in a golden swoon
And the lingering year all its sweetness squandered. 
Oh, it was blithesome to roam at will 
Over the crest of each westering hill, 
Over those dreamy, enchanted lands 
Where the trees held to us their friendly hands! 

Winds in the pine boughs softly crooned,
Or in the grasses complained most sweetly, 
With all the music of earth attuned
In this dear ripe time that must pass so fleetly: 
Golden rod as we idled by 
Held its torches of flame on high, 
And the asters beckoned along our way 
Like fair fine ladies in silk array. 

We passed by woods where the day aside
Knelt like a pensive nun and tender, 
We looked on valleys of purple pride
Where she reigned a queen in her misty splendor; 
But out on the hills she was wild and free, 
A comrade to wander right gipsily, 
Luring us on over waste and wold 
With the charm of a message half sung, half told, 

And now, when far in the shining west
She has dropped her flowers on the sunset meadow,
We turn away from our witching quest
To the kindly starshine and gathering shadow; 
Filled to the lips of our souls are we 
With the beauty given so lavishly,
And hand in hand with the night we come 
Back to the light and the hearth of home.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things