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Best Famous Leaches Poems

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

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Written by Adrienne Rich | Create an image from this poem

Shattered Head

 A life hauls itself uphill
through hoar-mist steaming
the sun's tongue licking
leaf upon leaf into stricken liquid
When? When? cry the soothseekers
but time is a bloodshot eye
seeing its last of beauty its own
foreclosure
a bloodshot mind
finding itself unspeakable
What is the last thought?
Now I will let you know?
or, Now I know?
(porridge of skull-splinters, brain tissue
mouth and throat membrane, cranial fluid) 

Shattered head on the breast
of a wooded hill
Laid down there endlessly so
tendrils soaked into matted compose
became a root
torqued over the faint springhead
groin whence illegible
matter leaches: worm-borings, spurts of silt
volumes of sporic changes
hair long blown into far follicles
blasted into a chosen place 

Revenge on the head (genitals, breast, untouched)
revenge on the mouth
packed with its inarticulate confessions
revenge on the eyes
green-gray and restless
revenge on the big and searching lips
the tender tongue
revenge on the sensual, on the nose the
carrier of history
revenge on the life devoured
in another incineration

You can walk by such a place, the earth is 
made of them
where the stretched tissue of a field or woods 
is humid
with beloved matter
the soothseekers have withdrawn
you feel no ghost, only a sporic chorus
when that place utters its worn sigh
let us have peace

And the shattered head answers back

And I believed I was loved, I believed I loved
Who did this to us?


Written by Thomas Carew | Create an image from this poem

My Mistress Commanding Me to Return Her Letters

 SO grieves th' adventurous merchant, when he throws 
All the long toil'd-for treasure his ship stows 
Into the angry main, to save from wrack 
Himself and men, as I grieve to give back 
These letters : yet so powerful is your sway 
As if you bid me die, I must obey. 
Go then, blest papers, you shall kiss those hands 
That gave you freedom, but hold me in bands ; 
Which with a touch did give you life, but I, 
Because I may not touch those hands, must die. 
Methinks, as if they knew they should be sent 
Home to their native soil from banishment ; 
I see them smile, like dying saints that know 
They are to leave the earth and toward heaven go. 
When you return, pray tell your sovereign 
And mine, I gave you courteous entertain ; 
Each line received a tear, and then a kiss ; 
First bathed in that, it 'scaped unscorch'd from this : 
I kiss'd it because your hand had been there ; 
But, 'cause it was not now, I shed a tear. 
Tell her, no length of time, nor change of air, 
No cruelty, disdain, absence, despair, 
No, nor her steadfast constancy, can deter 
My vassal heart from ever honouring her. 
Though these be powerful arguments to prove 
I love in vain, yet I must ever love. 
Say, if she frown, when you that word rehearse, 
Service in prose is oft called love in verse : 
Then pray her, since I send back on my part 
Her papers, she will send me back my heart. 
If she refuse, warn her to come before 
The god of love, whom thus I will implore : 
“ Trav'lling thy country's road, great god, I spied 
By chance this lady, and walk'd by her side 
From place to place, fearing no violence, 
For I was well arm'd, and had made defence 
In former fights 'gainst fiercer foes than she 
Did at our first encounter seem to be. 
But, going farther, every step reveal'd 
Some hidden weapon till that time conceal'd ; 
Seeing those outward arms, I did begin 
To fear some greater strength was lodged within ; 
Looking into her mind, I might survey 
An host of beauties, that in ambush lay, 
And won the day before they fought the field, 
For I, unable to resist, did yield. 
But the insulting tyrant so destroys 
My conquer'd mind, my ease, my peace, my joys, 
Breaks my sweet sleeps, invades my harmless rest, 
Robs me of all the treasure of my breast, 
Spares not my heart, nor yet a greater wrong, 
For, having stol'n my heart, she binds my tongue. 
But at the last her melting eyes unseal'd 
My lips, enlarged my tongue : then I reveal'd 
To her own ears the story of my harms, 
Wrought by her virtues and her beauty's charms. 
Now hear, just judge, an act of savageness ; 
When I complain, in hope to find redress, 
She bends her andry brow, and from her eye 
Shoots thousand darts ; I then well hoped to die
But in such sovereign balm Love dips his shot, 
That, though they wound a heart, they kill it not. 
She saw the blood gush forth from many a wound, 
Yet fled, and left me bleeding on the ground, 
Nor sought my cure, nor saw me since : 'tis true, 
Absence and Time, two cunning leaches, drew 
The flesh together, yet, sure, though the skin 
Be closed without, the wound festers within. 
Thus hath this cruel lady used a true 
Servant and subject to herself and you ; 
Nor know I, great Love, if my life be lent 
To show thy mercy or my punishment : 
Since by the only magic of thy art 
A lover still may live that wants his heart. 
If this indictment fright her, so as she 
Seem willing to return my heart to me, 
But cannot find it (for perhaps it may, 
'Mongst other trifling hearts, be out o' th' way); 
If she repent and would make me amends, 
Bid her but send me hers, and we are friends.”

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry