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Best Famous Pencil In Poems

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

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Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Rhyme Builder

 I envy not those gay galoots
Who count on dying in their boots;
For that, to tell the sober truth
Sould be the privilege of youth;
But aged bones are better sped
To heaven from a downy bed.
So prop me up with pillows two, And serve me with the barley brew; And put a pencil in my hand, A copy book at my command; And let my final effort be To ring a rhyme of homely glee.
For since I've loved it oh so long, Let my last labour be in song; And when my pencil falters down, Oh may a final couplet crown The years of striving I have made To justify the jinglers trade.
Let me surrender with a rhyme My long and lovely lease of time; Let me be grateful for the gift To couple words in lyric lift; Let me song-build with humble hod, My last brick dedicate to God.


Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Wedding Ring Dance

 I dance in circles holding
the moth of the marriage,
thin, sticky, fluttering
its skirts, its webs.
The moth oozing a tear, or is it a drop of urine? The moth, grinning like a pear, or is it teeth clamping the iron maiden shut? The moth, who is my mother, who is my father, who was my lover, floats airily out of my hands and I dance slower, pulling off the fat diamond engagement ring, pulling off the elopement wedding ring, and holding them, clicking them in thumb and forefinger, the indent of twenty-five years, like a tiny rip of a tiny earthquake.
Underneath the soil lies the violence, the shift, the crack of continents, the anger, and above only a cut, a half-inch space to stick a pencil in.
The finger is scared but it keeps its long numb place.
And I keep dancing, a sort of waltz, clicking the two rings, all of a life at its last cough, as I swim through the air of the kitchen, and the same radio plays its songs and I make a small path through them with my bare finger and my funny feet, doing the undoing dance, on April 14th, 1973, letting my history rip itself off me and stepping into something unknown and transparent, but all ten fingers stretched outward, flesh extended as metal waiting for a magnet.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Work

 When twenty-one I loved to dream,
 And was to loafing well inclined;
Somehow I couldn't get up steam
 To welcome work of any kind.
While students burned the midnight lamp, With dour ambition as their goad, I longed to be a gayful tramp And greet adventure on the road.
But now that sixty years have sped, Behold! I toil from morn to night.
The thoughts that teem into my head I pray: God give me time to write.
With eager and unflagging pen No drudgery of desk I shirk, And preach to all retiring men The gospel of unceasing work.
And yet I do not sadly grieve Such squandering of golden days; For from my dreaming I believe Have stemmed my least unworthy lays.
Aye, toil is best when all is said, As age has made me understand .
.
.
So fitly fold, when I am dead, A pencil in my hand.
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

Death warrants are supposed to be

 Death warrants are supposed to be
An enginery of equity
A merciful mistake
A pencil in an Idol's Hand
A Devotee has oft consigned
To Crucifix or Block

Book: Shattered Sighs