Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Seeding Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by Antonio Machado | Create an image from this poem

To Jose Mar?a Palacio

 Palacio, good friend,
is spring there
showing itself on branches of black poplars
by the roads and river? On the steeps
of the high Duero, spring is late,
but so soft and lovely when it comes!
Are there a few new leaves
on the old elms?
The acacias must still be bare,
and the mountain peaks snow-filled.
Oh the massed pinks and whites of Moncayo, massed up there, beauty, in the sky of Aragon! Are there brambles flowering, among the grey stones, and white daisies, in the thin grass? On the belltowers the storks will be landing now.
The wheat must be green and the brown mules working sown furrows, the people seeding late crops, in April rain.
There’ll be bees, drunk on rosemary and thyme.
Are the plum trees in flower? Violets still? There must be hunters about, stealthy, their decoys under long capes.
Palacio, good friend, are there nightingales by the river? When the first lilies, and the first roses, open, on a blue evening, climb to Espino, high Espino, where she is in the earth.


Written by Bliss Carman | Create an image from this poem

Earth Voices

 I
I heard the spring wind whisper
Above the brushwood fire,
"The world is made forever
Of transport and desire.
"I am the breath of being, The primal urge of things; I am the whirl of star dust, I am the lift of wings.
"I am the splendid impulse That comes before the thought, The joy and exaltation Wherein the life is caught.
"Across the sleeping furrows I call the buried seed, And blade and bud and blossom Awaken at my need.
"Within the dying ashes I blow the sacred spark, And make the hearts of lovers To leap against the dark.
"II I heard the spring light whisper Above the dancing stream, "The world is made forever In likeness of a dream.
"I am the law of planets, I am the guide of man; The evening and the morning Are fashioned to my plan.
"I tint the dawn with crimson, I tinge the sea with blue; My track is in the desert, My trail is in the dew.
"I paint the hills with color, And in my magic dome I light the star of evening To steer the traveller home.
"Within the house of being, I feed the lamp of truth With tales of ancient wisdom And prophecies of youth.
"III I heard the spring rain murmur Above the roadside flower, "The world is made forever In melody and power.
"I keep the rhythmic measure That marks the steps of time, And all my toil is fashioned To symmetry and rhyme.
"I plow the untilled upland, I ripe the seeding grass, And fill the leafy forest With music as I pass.
"I hew the raw, rough granite To loveliness of line, And when my work is finished, Behold, it is divine! "I am the master-builder In whom the ages trust.
I lift the lost perfection To blossom from the dust.
"IV Then Earth to them made answer, As with a slow refrain Born of the blended voices Of wind and sun and rain, "This is the law of being That links the threefold chain: The life we give to beauty Returns to us again.
"
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Russia To The Pacifists

  1918
God rest you, peaceful gentlemen, let nothing you dismay,
 But--leave your sports a little while--the dead are borne
 this way!
Armies dead and Cities dead, past all count or care.
God rest you, merry gentlemen, what portent see you there? Singing:--Break ground for a wearied host That have no ground to keep.
Give them the rest that they covet most .
.
.
And who shall next to sleep, good sirs, In such a trench to sleep? God rest you, peaceful gentlemen, but give us leave to pass.
We go to dig a nation's grave as great as England was.
For this Kingdom and this Glory and this Power and this Pride Three hundred years it flourished--in three hundred days it died.
Singing:--Pour oil for a frozen throng, That lie about the ways.
Give them the warmth they have lacked so long .
.
.
And what shall be next to blaze, good sirs, On such a pyre to blaze? God rest you, thoughtful gentlemen, and send your sleep is light! Remains of this dominion no shadow, sound, or sight, Except the sound of weeping and the sight of burning fire, And the shadow of a people that is trampled into mire.
Singing:--Break bread for a starving folk That perish in the field.
Give them their food as they take the yoke .
.
.
And who shall be next to yield, good sirs, For such a bribe to yield? God rest you merry gentlemen, and keep you in your mirth! Was ever Kingdom turned so soon to ashes, blood and earth? 'Twixt the summer and the snow-seeding-time and frost-- Arms and victual, hope and counsel, name and country lost! Singing:--Let down by the foot and the head-- Shovel and smooth it all ! So do we bury a Nation dead .
.
.
And who shall be next to fall, good sirs, With your good help to fall?
Written by Rg Gregory | Create an image from this poem

(filtered)

 a nearby field provides the plants
sometimes with a wild profusion
(organisation seems a long way off)

it takes an eye used to ink or paint
to confront such a rich confusion
and draw it inwards to a proof

that pattern too within constraints
has room for a wild fling - passion's
best rendered when the heart's aloof

images creep up through the vents
seeding voids with light explosions
chaos must come before the truth

art is nature (filtered) sucking sense
from unimaginable delusions
nowhere-to-go-to finds its path

out of thin air a formal dance
of paint or ink has reached conclusion
and in a nutshell cosmos coughs
Written by William Morris | Create an image from this poem

Song III: It Grew Up Without Heeding

 Love is enough: it grew up without heeding
In the days when ye knew not its name nor its measure,
And its leaflets untrodden by the light feet of pleasure
Had no boast of the blossom, no sign of the seeding,
As the morning and evening passed over its treasure.
And what do ye say then?--That Spring long departed Has brought forth no child to the softness and showers; --That we slept and we dreamed through the Summer of flowers; We dreamed of the Winter, and waking dead-hearted Found Winter upon us and waste of dull hours.
Nay, Spring was o'er-happy and knew not the reason, And Summer dreamed sadly, for she thought all was ended In her fulness of wealth that might not be amended; But this is the harvest and the garnering season, And the leaf and the blossom in the ripe fruit are blended.
It sprang without sowing, it grew without heeding, Ye knew not its name and ye knew not its measure, Ye noted it not mid your hope and your pleasure; There was pain in its blossom, despair in its seeding, But daylong your bosom now nurseth its treasure.



Book: Shattered Sighs