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Best Famous Nudgers Poems

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

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Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Fury Of Beautiful Bones

 Sing me a thrush, bone.
Sing me a nest of cup and pestle.
Sing me a sweetbread fr an old grandfather.
Sing me a foot and a doorknob, for you are my love.
Oh sing, bone bag man, sing.
Your head is what I remember that Augusty you were in love with another woman but taht didn't matter.
I was the gury of your bones, your fingers long and nubby, your forehead a beacon, bare as marble and I worried you like an odor because you had not quite forgotten, bone bag man, garlic in the North End, the book you dedicated, naked as a fish, naked as someone drowning into his own mouth.
I wonder, Mr.
Bone man, what you're thinking of your fury now, gone sour as a sinking whale, crawling up the alphabet on her own bones.
Am I in your ear still singing songs in the rain, me of the death rattle, me of the magnolias, me of the sawdust tavern at the city's edge.
Women have lovely bones, arms, neck, thigh and I admire them also, but your bones supersede loveliness.
They are the tough ones that get broken and reset.
I just can't answer for you, only for your bones, round rulers, round nudgers, round poles, numb nubkins, the sword of sugar.
I feel the skull, Mr.
Skeleton, living its own life in its own skin.


Written by Theodore Roethke | Create an image from this poem

The Minimal

 I study the lives on a leaf: the little
Sleepers, numb nudgers in cold dimensions,
Beetles in caves, newts, stone-deaf fishes,
Lice tethered to long limp subterranean weeds,
Squirmers in bogs,
And bacterial creepers
Wriggling through wounds
Like elvers in ponds,
Their wan mouths kissing the warm sutures,
Cleaning and caressing,
Creeping and healing.
Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Mushrooms

 Overnight, very
Whitely, discreetly,
Very quietly

Our toes, our noses
Take hold on the loam,
Acquire the air.
Nobody sees us, Stops us, betrays us; The small grains make room.
Soft fists insist on Heaving the needles, The leafy bedding, Even the paving.
Our hammers, our rams, Earless and eyeless, Perfectly voiceless, Widen the crannies, Shoulder through holes.
We Diet on water, On crumbs of shadow, Bland-mannered, asking Little or nothing.
So many of us! So many of us! We are shelves, we are Tables, we are meek, We are edible, Nudgers and shovers In spite of ourselves.
Our kind multiplies: We shall by morning Inherit the earth.
Our foot's in the door.

Book: Shattered Sighs