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Best Famous Shredding Poems

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

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Written by Adrienne Rich | Create an image from this poem

Victory

 Something spreading underground won't speak to us
under skin won't declare itself
not all life-forms want dialogue with the
machine-gods in their drama hogging down
the deep bush clear-cutting refugees
from ancient or transient villages into
our opportunistic fervor to search
 crazily for a host a lifeboat

Suddenly instead of art we're eyeing
organisms traced and stained on cathedral transparencies
cruel blues embroidered purples succinct yellows
a beautiful tumor

•

I guess you're not alone I fear you're alone
There's, of course, poetry:
awful bridge rising over naked air: I first
took it as just a continuation of the road: 
"a masterpiece of engineering
praised, etc." then on the radio: 
"incline too steep for ease of, etc."
Drove it nonetheless because I had to
this being how— So this is how
I find you: alive and more

•

As if (how many conditionals must we suffer?) 
I'm driving to your side
—an intimate collusion—
packed in the trunk my bag of foils for fencing with pain
glasses of varying spectrum for sun or fog or sun-struck
 rain or bitterest night my sack of hidden
poetries, old glue shredding from their spines

my time exposure of the Leonids
 over Joshua Tree

As if we're going to win this O because

•

If you have a sister I am not she
nor your mother nor you my daughter
nor are we lovers or any kind of couple
 except in the intensive care
 of poetry and
death's master plan architecture-in-progress
draft elevations of a black-and-white mosaic dome
the master left on your doorstep
with a white card in black calligraphy:
 Make what you will of this
 As if leaving purple roses

•

If (how many conditionals must we suffer?)
I tell you a letter from the master
is lying on my own doorstep
glued there with leaves and rain
and I haven't bent to it yet
 if I tell you I surmise
 he writes differently to me:

 Do as you will, you have had your life
 many have not

signing it in his olden script:

 Meister aus Deutschland

•

In coldest Europe end of that war
frozen domes iron railings frozen stoves lit in the
 streets
memory banks of cold

the Nike of Samothrace
on a staircase wings in blazing
backdraft said to me
: : to everyone she met
 Displaced, amputated never discount me

Victory
 indented in disaster striding
 at the head of stairs

 for Tory Dent


Written by Philip Larkin | Create an image from this poem

Wires

 The widest prairies have electric fences, 
For though old cattle know they must not stray 
Young steers are always scenting purer water 
Not here but anywhere. Beyond the wires 

Leads them to blunder up against the wires
Whose muscle-shredding violence gives no quarter.
Young steers become old cattle from that day, 
Electric limits to their widest senses.
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

Love Letter Written In A Burning Building

 I am in a crate, the crate that was ours,
full of white shirts and salad greens,
the icebox knocking at our delectable knocks,
and I wore movies in my eyes,
and you wore eggs in your tunnel,
and we played sheets, sheets, sheets
all day, even in the bathtub like lunatics.
But today I set the bed afire
and smoke is filling the room,
it is getting hot enough for the walls to melt,
and the icebox, a gluey white tooth.

I have on a mask in order to write my last words,
and they are just for you, and I will place them
in the icebox saved for vodka and tomatoes,
and perhaps they will last.
The dog will not. Her spots will fall off.
The old letters will melt into a black bee.
The night gowns are already shredding
into paper, the yellow, the red, the purple.
The bed -- well, the sheets have turned to gold --
hard, hard gold, and the mattress
is being kissed into a stone.

As for me, my dearest Foxxy,
my poems to you may or may not reach the icebox
and its hopeful eternity,
for isn't yours enough?
The one where you name
my name right out in P.R.?
If my toes weren't yielding to pitch
I'd tell the whole story --
not just the sheet story
but the belly-button story,
the pried-eyelid story,
the whiskey-sour-of-the-nipple story --
and shovel back our love where it belonged.

Despite my asbestos gloves,
the cough is filling me with black and a red powder seeps through my
veins,
our little crate goes down so publicly
and without meaning it, you see, meaning a solo act,
a cremation of the love,
but instead we seem to be going down right in the middle of a Russian
street,
the flames making the sound of
the horse being beaten and beaten,
the whip is adoring its human triumph
while the flies wait, blow by blow,
straight from United Fruit, Inc.
Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

The Matrix

 Goaded and harassed in the factory
That tears our life up into bits of days
Ticked off upon a clock which never stays,
Shredding our portion of Eternity,
We break away at last, and steal the key
Which hides a world empty of hours; ways
Of space unroll, and Heaven overlays
The leafy, sun-lit earth of Fantasy.
Beyond the ilex shadow glares the sun,
Scorching against the blue flame of the sky.
Brown lily-pads lie heavy and supine
Within a granite basin, under one
The bronze-gold glimmer of a carp; and I
Reach out my hand and pluck a nectarine.
Written by Jorie Graham | Create an image from this poem

Manteau Three

 In the fairy tale the sky
 makes of itself a coat
because it needs you
 to put it 
on. How can it do this?
 It collects its motes. It condenses its sound-
track, all the pyrric escapes, the pilgrimages
 still unconsummated, 
the turreted thoughts of sky it slightly liquefies
 and droops, the hum of the yellowest day alive,

office-holders in their books, their corridors,
 resplendent memories of royal rooms now filtered up — by smoke, by

must — it tangles up into a weave,
 tied up with votive offerings — laws, electricity — 
what the speakers let loose from their tiny eternity,
 what the empty streets held up as offering 
when only a bit of wind
 litigated in the sycamores,

oh and the flapping drafts unfinished thoughts
 raked out of air, 
and the leaves clawing their way after deep sleep set in,
 and all formations — assonant, muscular, 
chatty hurries of swarm (peoples, debris before the storm) — 
 things that grew loud when the street grew empty, 
and breaths that let themselves be breathed
 to freight a human argument, 
and sidelong glances in the midst of things, and voice — yellowest
 day alive — as it took place 
above the telegram,
 above the hand cleaving the open-air to cut its thought, 
hand flung

 towards open doorways into houses where 
den-couch and silver tray
 itch with inaction — what is there left now 
to believe — the coat? — it tangles up a good tight weave,
 windy yet sturdy, 
a coat for the ages — 
 one layer a movie of bluest blue, 
one layer the war-room mappers and their friends
 in trenches
also blue,
 one layer market-closings and one 
hydrangeas turning blue
 just as I say so,
and so on,
 so that it flows in the sky to the letter, 
you still sitting in the den below
 not knowing perhaps that now is as the fairy tale 
exactly, (as in the movie), foretold,
 had one been on the right channel, 
(although you can feel it alongside, in the house, in the food, the umbrellas,
 the bicycles), 
(even the leg muscles of this one grown quite remarkable),

 the fairy tale beginning to hover above — onscreen fangs, at the desk 
one of the older ones paying bills —
 the coat in the sky above the house not unlike celestial fabric, 
a snap of wind and plot to it, 
 are we waiting for the kinds to go to sleep? 
when is it time to go outside and look?
 I would like to place myself in the position 
of the one suddenly looking up
 to where the coat descends and presents itself, 
not like the red shoes in the other story,
 red from all we had stepped in, 
no, this the coat all warm curves and grassy specificities,
 intellectuals also there, but still indoors, 
standing up smokily to mastermind,
 theory emerging like a flowery hat, 
there, above the head,
 descending,


while outside, outside, this coat — 
 which I desire, which I, in the tale, 
desire — as it touches the dream of reason
 which I carry inevitably in my shoulders, in my very carriage, forgive me, 
begins to shred like this, as you see it do, now,
 as if I were too much in focus making the film shred, 
it growing very hot (as in giving birth) though really
 it being just evening, the movie back on the reel, 
the sky one step further down into the world but only one step,
 me trying to pull it down, onto this frame, 
for which it seems so fitting,
 for which the whole apparatus of attention had seemed to prepare us, 
and then the shredding beginning
 which sounds at first like the lovely hum 
where sun fills the day to its fringe of stillness
 but then continues, too far, too hard,
and we have to open our hands again and let it go, let it rise up
 above us,

 incomprehensible, 
clicker still in my right hand,
 the teller of the story and the shy bride, 
to whom he was showing us off a little perhaps,
 leaning back into their gossamer ripeness, 
him touching her storm, the petticoat,
 the shredded coat left mid-air, just above us, 
the coat in which the teller's plot
 entered this atmosphere, this rosy sphere of hope and lack,

this windiness of middle evening,
 so green, oh what difference could it have made 
had the teller needed to persuade her
 further — so green 
this torn hem in the first miles — or is it inches? — of our night,
 so full of hollowness, so wild with rhetoric ....



Book: Reflection on the Important Things