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Best Famous Puzzlement Poems

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

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

Raising The Flag

 Behold! the Spanish flag they're raising
Before the Palace courtyard gate;
To watch its progress bold and blazing
Two hundred patient people wait.
Though bandsmen play the anthem bravely The silken emblem seems to lag; Two hundred people watch it gravely - But only two salute the flag.
Fine-clad and arrogant of manner The twain are like dark dons of old, And to that high and haughty banner Uplifted palms they proudly hold.
The others watch them glumly, grimly; No sullen proletariat these, but middle-class, well clad though dimly, Who seem to live in decent ease.
Then sadly they look at each other, And sigh ans shrug and turn away.
What is the feeling that they smother? I wonder, but it's none too gay.
And as with puzzlement I bide me, Beneath that rich, resplendent rag, I hear a bitter voice beside me: "It isn't ours - it's Franco's flag.
"I'm Right: I have no Left obsession.
I hate the Communists like hell, But after ten years of oppression I hate our Franco twice as well.
And hush! I keep (do not reprove me) His portrait in a private place, And every time my bowels move me I - spit in El Caudillo's face.
" These were the words I heard, I swear, But when I turned around to stare, Believe me - there was no one there.


Written by Erica Jong | Create an image from this poem

Nursing You

 On the first night
of the full moon,
the primeval sack of ocean
broke,
& I gave birth to you
little woman,
little carrot top,
little turned-up nose,
pushing you out of myself
as my mother
pushed
me out of herself,
as her mother did,
& her mother's mother before her,
all of us born
of woman.
I am the second daughter of a second daughter of a second daughter, but you shall be the first.
You shall see the phrase "second sex" only in puzzlement, wondering how anyone, except a madman, could call you "second" when you are so splendidly first, conferring even on your mother firstness, vastness, fullness as the moon at its fullest lights up the sky.
Now the moon is full again & you are four weeks old.
Little lion, lioness, yowling for my breasts, rowling at the moon, how I love your lustiness, your red face demanding, your hungry mouth howling, your screams, your cries which all spell life in large letters the color of blood.
You are born a woman for the sheer glory of it, little redhead, beautiful screamer.
You are no second sex, but the first of the first; & when the moon's phases fill out the cycle of your life, you will crow for the joy of being a woman, telling the pallid moon to go drown herself in the blue ocean, & glorying, glorying, glorying in the rosy wonder of your sunshining wondrous self.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Tourists

 In a strange town in a far land
 They met amid a throng;
They stared, they could not understand
 How life was sudden song.
As brown eyes looked in eyes of grey Just for a moment's space, Twin spirits met with sweet dismay In that strange place.
And then the mob that swept them near Reft them away again; Two hearts in all the world most dear Knew puzzlement and pain.
They barely brushed in passing by, A wildered girl and boy, Who should have clasped with laughing cry, And wept for joy.
But no, the crowd cleft them apart, And she went East, he West; But there was havoc in his heart And brooding in her breast.
In a far land, in a strange town Amid a mob they met; They stared, they passed .
.
.
But O deep down, Can they forget?

Book: Reflection on the Important Things