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Best Famous Jack Frost Poems

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

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Written by Ezra Pound | Create an image from this poem

Ezra on the Strike

 Wal, Thanksgivin' do be comin' round.
With the price of turkeys on the bound, And coal, by gum! Thet were just found, Is surely gettin' cheaper.
The winds will soon begin to howl, And winter, in its yearly growl, Across the medders begin to prowl, And Jack Frost gettin' deeper.
By shucks! It seems to me, That you I orter be Thankful, that our Ted could see A way to operate it.
I sez to Mandy, sure, sez I, I'll bet thet air patch o' rye Thet he'll squash 'em by-and-by, And he did, by cricket! No use talkin', he's the man - One of the best thet ever ran, Fer didn't I turn Republican One o' the fust? I 'lowed as how he'd beat the rest, But old Si Perkins, he hemmed and guessed, And sed as how it wuzn't best To meddle with the trust.


Written by Elizabeth Bishop | Create an image from this poem

First Death In Nova Scotia

 In the cold, cold parlor
my mother laid out Arthur
beneath the chromographs:
Edward, Prince of Wales,
with Princess Alexandra,
and King George with Queen Mary.
Below them on the table stood a stuffed loon shot and stuffed by Uncle Arthur, Arthur's father.
Since Uncle Arthur fired a bullet into him, he hadn't said a word.
He kept his own counsel on his white, frozen lake, the marble-topped table.
His breast was deep and white, cold and caressable; his eyes were red glass, much to be desired.
"Come," said my mother, "Come and say good-bye to your little cousin Arthur.
" I was lifted up and given one lily of the valley to put in Arthur's hand.
Arthur's coffin was a little frosted cake, and the red-eyed loon eyed it from his white, frozen lake.
Arthur was very small.
He was all white, like a doll that hadn't been painted yet.
Jack Frost had started to paint him the way he always painted the Maple Leaf (Forever).
He had just begun on his hair, a few red strokes, and then Jack Frost had dropped the brush and left him white, forever.
The gracious royal couples were warm in red and ermine; their feet were well wrapped up in the ladies' ermine trains.
They invited Arthur to be the smallest page at court.
But how could Arthur go, clutching his tiny lily, with his eyes shut up so tight and the roads deep in snow?

Book: Shattered Sighs