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Best Famous Ineradicable Poems

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

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Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Event

How the elements solidify! ---
The moonlight, that chalk cliff
In whose rift we lie

Back to back. I here an owl cry
From its cold indigo.
Intolerable vowels enter my heart.

The child in the white crib revolves and sighs,
Opens its mouth now, demanding.
His little face is carved in pained, red wood.

Then there are the stars - ineradicable, hard.
One touch : it burns and sickens.
I cannot see your eyes.

Where apple bloom ices the night
I walk in a ring,
A groove of old faults, deep and bitter.

Love cannot come here.
A black gap discloses itself.
On the opposite lip

A small white soul is waving, a small white maggot.
My limbs, also, have left me.
Who has dismembered us?

The dark is melting. We touch like cripples. 


Written by Elizabeth Barrett Browning | Create an image from this poem

Chorus of Eden Spirits

 HEARKEN, oh hearken! let your souls behind you 
Turn, gently moved! 
Our voices feel along the Dread to find you, 
O lost, beloved! 
Through the thick-shielded and strong-marshalled angels, 
They press and pierce: 
Our requiems follow fast on our evangels,— 
Voice throbs in verse. 
We are but orphaned spirits left in Eden 
A time ago: 
God gave us golden cups, and we were bidden 
To feed you so. 
But now our right hand hath no cup remaining, 
No work to do, 
The mystic hydromel is spilt, and staining 
The whole earth through. 
Most ineradicable stains, for showing 
(Not interfused!) 
That brighter colours were the world’s foregoing, 
Than shall be used. 
Hearken, oh hearken! ye shall hearken surely 
For years and years, 
The noise beside you, dripping coldly, purely, 
Of spirits’ tears. 
The yearning to a beautiful denied you, 
Shall strain your powers. 
Ideal sweetnesses shall over-glide you, 
Resumed from ours. 
In all your music, our pathetic minor 
Your ears shall cross; 
And all good gifts shall mind you of diviner, 
With sense of loss. 
We shall be near you in your poet-languors 
And wild extremes, 
What time ye vex the desert with vain angers, 
Or mock with dreams. 
And when upon you, weary after roaming, 
Death’s seal is put, 
By the foregone ye shall discern the coming, 
Through eyelids shut.
Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

Epitaph in a Church-Yard in Charleston South Carolina

 GEORGE AUGUSTUS CLOUGH
A NATIVE OF LIVERPOOL,
DIED SUDDENLY OF "STRANGER'S FEVER"
NOV'R 5th 1843
AGED 22

He died of "Stranger's Fever" when his youth
Had scarcely melted into manhood, so
The chiselled legend runs; a brother's woe
Laid bare for epitaph. The savage ruth
Of a sunny, bright, but alien land, uncouth
With cruel caressing dealt a mortal blow,
And by this summer sea where flowers grow
In tropic splendor, witness to the truth
Of ineradicable race he lies.
The law of duty urged that he should roam,
Should sail from fog and chilly airs to skies
Clear with deceitful welcome. He had come
With proud resolve, but still his lonely eyes
Ached with fatigue at never seeing home.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things