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Best Famous Senile Poems

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

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Written by Eugene Field | Create an image from this poem

Dr. sam

 TO MISS GRACE KING

Down in the old French quarter,
Just out of Rampart street,
I wend my way
At close of day
Unto the quaint retreat
Where lives the Voodoo Doctor
By some esteemed a sham,
Yet I'll declare there's none elsewhere
So skilled as Doctor Sam
With the claws of a deviled crawfish,
The juice of the prickly prune,
And the quivering dew
From a yarb that grew
In the light of a midnight moon!

I never should have known him
But for the colored folk
That here obtain
And ne'er in vain
That wizard's art invoke;
For when the Eye that's Evil
Would him and his'n damn,
The *****'s grief gets quick relief
Of Hoodoo-Doctor Sam.
With the caul of an alligator, The plume of an unborn loon, And the poison wrung From a serpent's tongue By the light of a midnight moon! In all neurotic ailments I hear that he excels, And he insures Immediate cures Of weird, uncanny spells; The most unruly patient Gets docile as a lamb And is freed from ill by the potent skill Of Hoodoo-Doctor Sam; Feathers of strangled chickens, Moss from the dank lagoon, And plasters wet With spider sweat In the light of a midnight moon! They say when nights are grewsome And hours are, oh! so late, Old Sam steals out And hunts about For charms that hoodoos hate! That from the moaning river And from the haunted glen He silently brings what eerie things Give peace to hoodooed men:-- The tongue of a piebald 'possum, The tooth of a senile 'coon, The buzzard's breath that smells of death, And the film that lies On a lizard's eyes In the light of a midnight moon!


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

The Host

 I never could imagine God:
I don't suppose I ever will.
Beside His altar fire I nod With senile drowsiness but still In old of age as sight grows dim I have a sense of Him.
For when I count my sum of days I find so many sweet and good, My mind is full of peace and praise, My heart aglow with gratitude.
For my long living in the sun I want to thank someone.
Someone who has been kind to me; Some power within, if not on high, Who shaped my gentle destiny, And led me pleasant pastures by: Who taught me, whether gay or grave, To love the life He gave.
A Host of charity and cheer, Within a Tavern warm and bright; Who smiles and bids me have no fear As forth I fare into the night: From whom I beg no Heav'n, but bless For earthly happiness.
Written by James Joyce | Create an image from this poem

On the Beach at Fontana

 Wind whines and whines the shingle,
The crazy pierstakes groan;
A senile sea numbers each single
Slimesilvered stone.
From whining wind and colder Grey sea I wrap him warm And touch his trembling fineboned shoulder And boyish arm.
Around us fear, descending Darkness of fear above And in my heart how deep unending Ache of love!
Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

The Sunset Years of Samuel Shy

 Master I may be,
But not of my fate.
Now come the kisses, too many too late.
Tell me, O Parcae, For fain would I know, Where were these kisses three decades ago? Girls there were plenty, Mint julep girls, beer girls, Gay younger married and headstrong career girls, The girls of my friends And the wives of my friends, Some smugly settled and some at loose ends, Sad girls, serene girls, Girls breathless and turbulent, Debs cosmopolitan, matrons suburbulent, All of them amiable, All of them cordial, Innocent rousers of instincts primordial, But even though health and wealth Hadn't yet missed me, None of them, Not even Jenny, Once kissed me.
These very same girls Who with me have grown older Now freely relax with a head on my shoulder, And now come the kisses, A flood in full spate, The meaningless kisses, too many too late.
They kiss me hello, They kiss me goodbye, Should I offer a light, there's a kiss for reply.
They kiss me at weddings, They kiss me at wakes, The drop of a hat is less than it takes.
They kiss me at cocktails, They kiss me at bridge, It's all automatic, like slapping a midge.
The sound of their kisses Is loud in my ears Like the locusts that swarm every seventeen years.
I'm arthritic, dyspeptic, Potentially ulcery, And weary of kisses by custom compulsory.
Should my dear ones commit me As senile demential, It's from kisses perfunctory, inconsequential.
Answer, O Parcae, For fain would I know, Where were these kisses three decades ago?
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Belated Bard

 The songs I made from joy of earth
 In wanton wandering,
Are rapturous with Maytime mirth
 And ectasy of Spring.
But all the songs I sing today Take tediously the ear: Novemberishly dark are they With mortuary fear.
For half a century has gone Since first I rang a rhyme; And that is long to linger on The tolerance of Time.
This blue-veined hand with which I write Yet answers to my will; Though four-score years I count to-night I am unsilent still.
"Senile old fool!" I hear you say; "Beside the dying fire You huddle and stiff-fingered play Your tired and tinny lyre.
" Well, though your patience I may try, Bear with me yet awhile, And though you scorn my singing I Will thank you with a smile.
For I such soul-delighting joy Have found in simple rhyme, Since first a happy-hearted boy I coaxed a word to chime, That ere I tryst with Mother Earth Let from my heart arise A song of youth and starry mirth .
.
.
Then close my eyes.


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

The Centenarian

 Great Grandfather was ninety-nine
 And so it was our one dread,
That though his health was superfine
 He'd fail to make the hundred.
Though he was not a rolling stone No moss he seemed to gather: A patriarch of brawn and bone Was Great Grandfather.
He should have been senile and frail Instead of hale and hearty; But no, he loved a mug of ale, A boisterous old party.
'As frisky as a cold,' said he, 'A man's allotted span I've lived but now I plan to be A Centenarian.
' Then one night when I called on him Oh what a change I saw! His head was bowed, his eye was dim, Down-fallen was his jaw.
Said he: 'Leave me to die, I pray; I'm no more bloody use .
.
.
For in my mouth I found today-- A tooth that's loose.
'
Written by John Berryman | Create an image from this poem

Dream Song 21: Some good people daring and subtle voices

 Some good people, daring & subtle voices
and their tense faces, as I think of it
I see sank underground.
I see.
My radar digs.
I do not dig.
Cool their flushing blood, them eyes is shut— eyes? Appalled: by all the dead: Henry brooded.
Without exception! All.
ALL.
The senior population waits.
Come down! come down! A ghastly & flashing pause, clothed, life called; us do.
In a madhouse heard I an ancient man tube-fed who had not said for fifteen years (they said) one canny word, senile forever, who a heart might pierce, mutter 'O come on down.
O come on down.
' Clear whom he meant.

Book: Shattered Sighs