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Best Famous Phenomenon Poems

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

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Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

April 18

 the slime of all my yesterdays
rots in the hollow of my skull

and if my stomach would contract
because of some explicable phenomenon
such as pregnancy or constipation

I would not remember you

or that because of sleep
infrequent as a moon of greencheese
that because of food
nourishing as violet leaves
that because of these

and in a few fatal yards of grass
in a few spaces of sky and treetops

a future was lost yesterday
as easily and irretrievably
as a tennis ball at twilight


Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

First Child ... Second Child

 FIRST

Be it a girl, or one of the boys,
It is scarlet all over its avoirdupois,
It is red, it is boiled; could the obstetrician
Have possibly been a lobstertrician?
His degrees and credentials were hunky-dory,
But how's for an infantile inventory?
Here's the prodigy, here's the miracle!
Whether its head is oval or spherical,
You rejoice to find it has only one,
Having dreaded a two-headed daughter or son;
Here's the phenomenon all complete,
It's got two hands, it's got two feet,
Only natural, but pleasing, because
For months you have dreamed of flippers or claws.
Furthermore, it is fully equipped: Fingers and toes with nails are tipped; It's even got eyes, and a mouth clear cut; When the mouth comes open the eyes go shut, When the eyes go shut, the breath is loosed And the presence of lungs can be deduced.
Let the rockets flash and the cannon thunder, This child is a marvel, a matchless wonder.
A staggering child, a child astounding, Dazzling, diaperless, dumbfounding, Stupendous, miraculous, unsurpassed, A child to stagger and flabbergast, Bright as a button, sharp as a thorn, And the only perfect one ever born.
SECOND Arrived this evening at half-past nine.
Everybody is doing fine.
Is it a boy, or quite the reverse? You can call in the morning and ask the nurse.
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

That Day

 This is the desk I sit at
and this is the desk where I love you too much
and this is the typewriter that sits before me
where yesterday only your body sat before me
with its shoulders gathered in like a Greek chorus,
with its tongue like a king making up rules as he goes,
with its tongue quite openly like a cat lapping milk,
with its tongue -- both of us coiled in its slippery life.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your tongue, your tongue that came from your lips, two openers, half animals, half birds caught in the doorway of your heart.
That was the day I followed the king's rules, passing by your red veins and your blue veins, my hands down the backbone, down quick like a firepole, hands between legs where you display your inner knowledge, where diamond mines are buried and come forth to bury, come forth more sudden than some reconstructed city.
It is complete within seconds, that monument.
The blood runs underground yet brings forth a tower.
A multitude should gather for such an edifice.
For a miracle one stands in line and throws confetti.
Surely The Press is here looking for headlines.
Surely someone should carry a banner on the sidewalk.
If a bridge is constructed doesn't the mayor cut a ribbon? If a phenomenon arrives shouldn't the Magi come bearing gifts? Yesterday was the day I bore gifts for your gift and came from the valley to meet you on the pavement.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your face, your face after love, close to the pillow, a lullaby.
Half asleep beside me letting the old fashioned rocker stop, our breath became one, became a child-breath together, while my fingers drew little o's on your shut eyes, while my fingers drew little smiles on your mouth, while I drew I LOVE YOU on your chest and its drummer and whispered, "Wake up!" and you mumbled in your sleep, "Sh.
We're driving to Cape Cod.
We're heading for the Bourne Bridge.
We're circling the Bourne Circle.
" Bourne! Then I knew you in your dream and prayed of our time that I would be pierced and you would take root in me and that I might bring forth your born, might bear the you or the ghost of you in my little household.
Yesterday I did not want to be borrowed but this is the typewriter that sits before me and love is where yesterday is at.
Written by Dejan Stojanovic | Create an image from this poem

Afterlife Light

That star in the night sky 
Is not there anymore
But we see it and will see it
For millions of years yet to come.
Did the star die? Did it live? In life, we call this phenomenon A ghost, a hallucination.
(Is life a ghost too?) What if the star never lived? Or maybe its death dies While the star continues to live, Cheating death With its afterlife light.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The City of Dreadful Thirst

 The stranger came from Narromine and made his little joke-- 
"They say we folks in Narromine are narrow-minded folk.
But all the smartest men down here are puzzled to define A kind of new phenomenon that came to Narromine.
"Last summer up in Narromine 'twas gettin' rather warm-- Two hundred in the water bag, and lookin' like a storm-- We all were in the private bar, the coolest place in town, When out across the stretch of plain a cloud came rollin' down, "We don't respect the clouds up there, they fill us with disgust, They mostly bring a Bogan shower -- three raindrops and some dust; But each man, simultaneous-like, to each man said, 'I think That cloud suggests it's up to us to have another drink!' "There's clouds of rain and clouds of dust -- we've heard of them before, And sometimes in the daily press we read of 'clouds of war': But -- if this ain't the Gospel truth I hope that I may burst-- That cloud that came to Narromine was just a cloud of thirst.
"It wasn't like a common cloud, 'twas more a sort of haze; It settled down about the streets, and stopped for days and days, And now a drop of dew could fall and not a sunbeam shine To pierce that dismal sort of mist that hung on Narromine.
"Oh, Lord! we had a dreadful time beneath that cloud of thirst! We all chucked up our daily work and went upon the burst.
The very blacks about the town that used to cadge for grub, They made an organised attack and tried to loot the pub.
"We couldn't leave the private bar no matter how we tried; Shearers and squatters, union men and blacklegs side by side Were drinkin' there and dursn't move, for each was sure, he said, Before he'd get a half a mile the thirst would strike him dead! "We drank until the drink gave out, we searched from room to room, And round the pub, like drunken ghosts, went howling through the gloom.
The shearers found some kerosene and settled down again, But all the squatter chaps and I, we staggered to the train.
"And, once outside the cloud of thirst, we felt as right as pie, But while we stopped about the town we had to drink or die.
But now I hear it's safe enough, I'm going back to work Because they say the cloud of thirst has shifted on to Bourke.
"But when you see these clouds about -- like this one over here-- All white and frothy at the top, just like a pint of beer, It's time to go and have a drink, for if that cloud should burst You'd find the drink would all be gone, for that's a cloud of thirst!" We stood the man from Narromine a pint of half-and-half; He drank it off without a gasp in one tremendous quaff; "I joined some friends last night," he said, "in what they called a spree; But after Narromine 'twas just a holiday to me.
" And now beyond the Western Range, where sunset skies are red, And clouds of dust, and clouds of thirst, go drifting overhead, The railway train is taking back, along the Western Line, That narrow-minded person on his road to Narromine.



Book: Reflection on the Important Things