Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Partitions Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by John Betjeman | Create an image from this poem

Business Girls

 From the geyser ventilators
Autumn winds are blowing down
On a thousand business women
Having baths in Camden Town

Waste pipes chuckle into runnels,
Steam's escaping here and there,
Morning trains through Camden cutting
Shake the Crescent and the Square.
Early nip of changeful autumn, Dahlias glimpsed through garden doors, At the back precarious bathrooms Jutting out from upper floors; And behind their frail partitions Business women lie and soak, Seeing through the draughty skylight Flying clouds and railway smoke.
Rest you there, poor unbelov'd ones, Lap your loneliness in heat.
All too soon the tiny breakfast, Trolley-bus and windy street!


Written by William Carlos (WCW) Williams | Create an image from this poem

Light Hearted Author

 The birches are mad with green points 
the wood's edge is burning with their green, 
burning, seething—No, no, no.
The birches are opening their leaves one by one.
Their delicate leaves unfold cold and separate, one by one.
Slender tassels hang swaying from the delicate branch tips— Oh, I cannot say it.
There is no word.
Black is split at once into flowers.
In every bog and ditch, flares of small fire, white flowers!—Agh, the birches are mad, mad with their green.
The world is gone, torn into shreds with this blessing.
What have I left undone that I should have undertaken? O my brother, you redfaced, living man ignorant, stupid whose feet are upon this same dirt that I touch—and eat.
We are alone in this terror, alone, face to face on this road, you and I, wrapped by this flame! Let the polished plows stay idle, their gloss already on the black soil.
But that face of yours—! Answer me.
I will clutch you.
I will hug you, grip you.
I will poke my face into your face and force you to see me.
Take me in your arms, tell me the commonest thing that is in your mind to say, say anything.
I will understand you—! It is the madness of the birch leaves opening cold, one by one.
My rooms will receive me.
But my rooms are no longer sweet spaces where comfort is ready to wait on me with its crumbs.
A darkness has brushed them.
The mass of yellow tulips in the bowl is shrunken.
Every familiar object is changed and dwarfed.
I am shaken, broken against a might that splits comfort, blows apart my careful partitions, crushes my house and leaves me—with shrinking heart and startled, empty eyes—peering out into a cold world.
In the spring I would be drunk! In the spring I would be drunk and lie forgetting all things.
Your face! Give me your face, Yang Kue Fei! your hands, your lips to drink! Give me your wrists to drink— I drag you, I am drowned in you, you overwhelm me! Drink! Save me! The shad bush is in the edge of the clearing.
The yards in a fury of lilac blossoms are driving me mad with terror.
Drink and lie forgetting the world.
And coldly the birch leaves are opening one by one.
Coldly I observe them and wait for the end.
And it ends.
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

Fortitude incarnate

 Fortitude incarnate
Here is laid away
In the swift Partitions
Of the awful Sea --

Babble of the Happy
Cavil of the Bold
Hoary the Fruition
But the Sea is old

Edifice of Ocean
Thy tumultuous Rooms
Suit me at a venture
Better than the Tombs

Book: Shattered Sighs