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Best Famous Seep Poems

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

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Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

The Second Voyage

 We've sent our little Cupids all ashore --
 They were frightened, they were tired, they were cold:
Our sails of silk and purple go to store,
 And we've cut away our mast of beaten gold
  (Foul weather!)
Oh 'tis hemp and singing pine for to stand against the brine,
 But Love he is our master as of old!

The sea has shorn our galleries away,
 The salt has soiled our gilding past remede;
Our paint is flaked and blistered by the spray,
 Our sides are half a fathom furred in weed
  (Foul weather!)
And the Doves of Venus fled and the petrels came instead,
 But Love he was our master at our need!

'Was Youth would keep no vigil at the bow,
 'Was Pleasure at the helm too drunk to steer --
We've shipped three able quartermasters now.
Men call them Custom, Reverence, and Fear (Foul weather!) They are old and scarred and plain, but we'll run no risk again From any Port o' Paphos mutineer! We seek no more the tempest for delight, We skirt no more the indraught and the shoal -- We ask no more of any day or night Than to come with least adventure to our goal (Foul weather!) What we find we needs must brook, but we do not go to look, Nor tempt the Lord our God that saved us whole.
Yet, caring so, not overmuch we care To brace and trim for every foolish blast, If the squall be pleased to seep us unaware, He may bellow off to leeward like the last (Foul weather!) We will blame it on the deep (for the watch must have their sleep), And Love can come and wake us when 'tis past.
Oh launch them down with music from the beach, Oh warp them out with garlands from the quays -- Most resolute -- a damsel unto each -- New prows that seek the old Hesperides! (Foul weather!) Though we know their voyage is vain, yet we see our path again In the saffroned bridesails scenting all the seas! (Foul weather!)


Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Evil Seekers

 We are born with luck
which is to say with gold in our mouth.
As new and smooth as a grape, as pure as a pond in Alaska, as good as the stem of a green bean-- we are born and that ought to be enough, we ought to be able to carry on from that but one must learn about evil, learn what is subhuman, learn how the blood pops out like a scream, one must see the night before one can realize the day, one must listen hard to the animal within, one must walk like a sleepwalker on the edge of a roof, one must throw some part of her body into the devil's mouth.
Odd stuff, you'd say.
But I'd say you must die a little, have a book of matches go off in your hand, see your best friend copying your exam, visit an Indian reservation and see their plastic feathers, the dead dream.
One must be a prisoner just once to hear the lock twist into his gut.
After all that one is free to grasp at the trees, the stones, the sky, the birds that make sense out of air.
But even in a telephone booth evil can seep out of the receiver and we must cover it with a mattress, and then tear it from its roots and bury it, bury it.
Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Poppies In July

 Little poppies, little hell flames,
Do you do no harm?

You flicker.
I cannot touch you.
I put my hands among the flames.
Nothing burns And it exhausts me to watch you Flickering like that, wrinkly and clear red, like the skin of a mouth.
A mouth just bloodied.
Little bloody skirts! There are fumes I cannot touch.
Where are your opiates, your nauseous capsules? If I could bleed, or sleep! - If my mouth could marry a hurt like that! Or your liquors seep to me, in this glass capsule, Dulling and stilling.
But colorless.
Colorless.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Euthansia

 A sea-gull with a broken wing,
I found upon the kelp-strewn shore.
It sprawled and gasped; I sighed: "Poor thing! I fear your flying days are o'er; Sad victim of a savage gun, So ends your soaring in the sun.
" I only wanted to be kind; Its icy legs I gently caught, Thinking its fracture I might bind, But fiercely in its fear it fought; Till guessing that I meant no ill, It glared and gaped, but lay quite still.
I took it home and gave it food, And nursed its wing day after day.
Alas for my solicitude, It would not eat, but pined away.
And so at last with tender hands I took it to its native sands.
"I'll leave it where its kindred are," I thought, "And maybe they will cheer And comfort it": I watched afar, I saw them wheeling swiftly near.
.
.
.
Awhile they hovered overhead, Then darted down and - stabbed it dead.
When agonized is human breath, And there's of living not a chance, Could it not be that gentle death Might mean divine deliverance? Might it not seep into our skulls To be as merciful as gulls?

Book: Shattered Sighs