Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Saucepan Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by Katherine Mansfield | Create an image from this poem

Camomile Tea

Outside the sky is light with stars; 
There's a hollow roaring from the sea. 
And, alas! for the little almond flowers, 
The wind is shaking the almond tree. 

How little I thought, a year ago, 
In the horrible cottage upon the Lee 
That he and I should be sitting so 
And sipping a cup of camomile tea. 

Light as feathers the witches fly, 
The horn of the moon is plain to see; 
By a firefly under a jonquil flower 
A goblin toasts a bumble-bee. 

We might be fifty, we might be five, 
So snug, so compact, so wise are we! 
Under the kitchen-table leg 
My knee is pressing against his knee. 

Our shutters are shut, the fire is low, 
The tap is dripping peacefully; 
The saucepan shadows on the wall 
Are black and round and plain to see. 


Written by Sharon Olds | Create an image from this poem

The Mortal One

 Three months after he lies dead, that
long yellow narrow body,
not like Christ but like one of his saints,
the naked ones in the paintings whose bodies are
done in gilt, all knees and raw ribs,
the ones who died of nettles, bile, the
one who died roasted over a slow fire—
three months later I take the pot of
tulip bulbs out of the closet
and set it on the table and take off the foil hood.
The shoots stand up like young green pencils,
and there in the room is the comfortable smell of rot,
the bulb that did not make it, marked with
ridges like an elephant's notched foot,
I walk down the hall as if I were moving through the
long stem of the tulip toward the closed sheath.
In the kitchen I throw a palmful of peppercorns into the
 saucepan
as if I would grow a black tree from the soup,
I throw out the rotten chicken part,
glad again that we burned my father
before one single bloom of mold could
grow up
out of him,
maybe it had begun in his bowels but we burned his
 bowels
the way you burn the long blue
scarf of the dead, and all their clothing,
cleansing with fire. How fast time goes
now that I'm happy, now that I know how to
think of his dead body every day
without shock, almost without grief,
to take it into each part of the day the
way a loom parts the vertical threads,
half to the left half to the right like the Red Sea and you
throw the shuttle through with the warp-thread
attached to the feet, that small gold figure of my father—
how often I saw him in paintings and did not know him,
the tiny naked dead one in the corner,
the mortal one.
Written by Katherine Mansfield | Create an image from this poem

Grown-Up Talk

 Half-Past-Six and I were talking
In a very grown-up way;
We had got so tired with running
That we did not want to play.

"How do babies come, I wonder,"
He said, looking at the sky,
"Does God mix the things together
An' just make it-like a pie?"

I was really not quite certain,
But it sounded very nice;
It was all that we could think of,
Besides a book said "sugar and spice."

Half-Past-Six said--He's so clever--
Cleverer than me, I mean...
"I suppose God makes the black ones
When the saucepan isn't clean."
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

Saltbush Bills Gamecock

 'Twas Saltbush Bill, with his travelling sheep, was making his way to town; 
He crossed them over the Hard Times Run, and he came to the Take 'Em Down; 
He counted through at the boundary gate, and camped at the drafting yard: 
For Stingy Smith, of the Hard Times Run, had hunted him rather hard. 
He bore no malice to Stingy Smith -- 'twas simply the hand of Fate 
That caused his waggon to swerve aside and shatter old Stingy's gate; 
And being only the hand of Fate, it follows, without a doubt, 
It wasn't the fault of Saltbush Bill that Stingy's sheep got out. 
So Saltbush Bill, with an easy heart, prepared for what might befall, 
Commenced his stages on Take 'Em Down, the station of Roostr Hall. 
'Tis strange how often the men out back will take to some curious craft, 
Some ruling passion to keep their thoughts away from the overdraft: 
And Rooster Hall, of the Take 'Em Down, was widely known to fame 
As breeder of champion fighting cocks -- his forte was the British Game. 

The passing stranger within his gates that camped with old Rooster Hall 
Was forced to talk about fowls all noght, or else not talk at all. 
Though droughts should come, and though sheep should die, his fowls were his sole delight; 
He left his shed in the flood of work to watch two game-cocks fight. 
He held in scorn the Australian Game, that long-legged child of sin; 
In a desperate fight, with the steel-tipped spurs, the British Game must win! 
The Australian bird was a mongrel bird, with a touch of the jungle cock; 
The want of breeding must find him out, when facing the English stock; 
For British breeding, and British pluck, must triumph it over all -- 
And that was the root of the simple creed that governed old Rooster Hall. 



'Twas Saltbush Bill to the station rode ahead of his travelling sheep, 
And sent a message to Rooster Hall that wakened him out of his sleep -- 
A crafty message that fetched him out, and hurried him as he came -- 
"A drover has an Australian bird to match with your British Game." 
'Twas done, and done in half a trice; a five-pound note a side; 
Old Rooster Hall, with his champion bird, and the drover's bird untried. 

"Steel spurs, of course?" said old Rooster Hall; "you'll need 'em, without a doubt!" 
"You stick the spurs on your bird!" said Bill, "but mine fights best without." 
"Fights best without?" said old Rooster Hall; "he can't fight best unspurred! 
You must be crazy!" But Saltbush Bill said, "Wait till you see my bird!" 
So Rooster Hall to his fowl-yard went, and quickly back he came, 
Bearing a clipt and a shaven cock, the pride of his English Game; 
With an eye as fierce as an eaglehawk, and a crow like a trumbet call, 
He strutted about on the garden walk, and cackled at Rooster Hall. 
Then Rooster Hall sent off a boy with a word to his cronies two, 
McCrae (the boss of the Black Police) and Father Donahoo. 

Full many a cockfight old McCrae had held in his empty Court, 
With Father D. as the picker-up -- a regular all-round Sport! 
They got the message of Rooster Hall, and down to his run they came, 
Prepared to scoff at the drover's bird, and to bet on the English Game; 
They hied them off to the drover's camp, while Saltbush rode before -- 
Old Rooster Hall was a blithsome man, when he thought of the treat in store. 
They reached the camp, where the drover's cook, with countenance all serene, 
Was boiling beef in an iron pot, but never a fowl was seen. 

"Take off the beef from the fire," said Bill, "and wait till you see the fight; 
There's something fresh for the bill-of-fare -- there's game-fowl stew tonight! 
For Mister Hall has a fighting cock, all feathered and clipped and spurred; 
And he's fetched him here, for a bit of sport, to fight our Australian bird. 
I've made a match for our pet will win, though he's hardly a fighting cock, 
But he's game enough, and it's many a mile that he's tramped with the travelling stock." 
The cook he banged on a saucepan lid; and, soon as the sound was heard, 
Under the dray, in the shallow hid, a something moved and stirred: 
A great tame emu strutted out. Said Saltbush, "Here's our bird!" 
Bur Rooster Hall, and his cronies two, drove home without a word. 

The passing stranger within his gates that camps with old Rooster Hall 
Must talk about something else than fowls, if he wishes to talk at all. 
For the record lies in the local Court, and filed in its deepest vault, 
That Peter Hall, of the Take 'Em Down, was tried for a fierce assault 
On a stranger man, who, in all good faith, and prompted by what he heard, 
Had asked old Hall if a British Game could beat an Australian bird; 
And Old McCrae, who was on the bench, as soon as the case was tried, 
Remarked, "Discharged with a clean discharge -- the assault was justified!"

Book: Reflection on the Important Things