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Best Famous Moving Picture Poems

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

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

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Written by Vachel Lindsay | Create an image from this poem

Blanche Sweet

 MOVING-PICTURE ACTRESS

(After seeing the reel called "Oil and Water.
") Beauty has a throne-room In our humorous town, Spoiling its hob-goblins, Laughing shadows down.
Rank musicians torture Ragtime ballads vile, But we walk serenely Down the odorous aisle.
We forgive the squalor And the boom and squeal For the Great Queen flashes From the moving reel.
Just a prim blonde stranger In her early day, Hiding brilliant weapons, Too averse to play, Then she burst upon us Dancing through the night.
Oh, her maiden radiance, Veils and roses white.
With new powers, yet cautious, Not too smart or skilled, That first flash of dancing Wrought the thing she willed:— Mobs of us made noble By her strong desire, By her white, uplifting, Royal romance-fire.
Though the tin piano Snarls its tango rude, Though the chairs are shaky And the dramas crude, Solemn are her motions, Stately are her wiles, Filling oafs with wisdom, Saving souls with smiles; 'Mid the restless actors She is rich and slow.
She will stand like marble, She will pause and glow, Though the film is twitching, Keep a peaceful reign, Ruler of her passion, Ruler of our pain!


Written by Vachel Lindsay | Create an image from this poem

To Mary Pickford

 MOVING-PICTURE ACTRESS

(On hearing she was leaving the moving-pictures for the stage.
) Mary Pickford, doll divine, Year by year, and every day At the movmg-picture play, You have been my valentine.
Once a free-limbed page in hose, Baby-Rosalind in flower, Cloakless, shrinking, in that hour How our reverent passion rose, How our fine desire you won.
Kitchen-wench another day, Shapeless, wooden every way.
Next, a fairy from the sun.
Once you walked a grown-up strand Fish-wife siren, full of lure, Snaring with devices sure Lads who murdered on the sand.
But on most days just a child Dimpled as no grown-folk are, Cold of kiss as some north star, Violet from the valleys wild.
Snared as innocence must be, Fleeing, prisoned, chained, half-dead— At the end of tortures dread Roaring Cowboys set you free.
Fly, O song, to her to-day, Like a cowboy cross the land.
Snatch her from Belasco's hand And that prison called Broadway.
All the village swains await One dear lily-girl demure, Saucy, dancing, cold and pure, Elf who must return in state.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things