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Best Famous Southeast Poems

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

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Written by Li Po | Create an image from this poem

His Dream Of The Skyland

 The seafarers tell of the Eastern Isle of Bliss,
It is lost in a wilderness of misty sea waves.
But the Sky-land of the south, the Yueh-landers say,
May be seen through cracks of the glimmering cloud.
This land of the sky stretches across the leagues of heaven;
It rises above the Five Mountains and towers over the Scarlet Castle,

While, as if staggering before it, the Tien-tai Peak
Of forty-eight thousand feet leans toward the southeast.

So, longing to dream of the southlands of Wu and Yueh,
I flew across the Mirror Lake one night under the moon.

The moon in the lake followed my flight,
Followed me to the town of Yen-chi.
Here still stands the mansion of Prince Hsieh.
I saw the green waters curl and heard the monkeys' shrill cries.
I climbed, putting on the clogs of the prince, 
Skyward on a ladder of clouds,
And half-way up from the sky-wall I saw the morning sun,
And heard the heaven's cock crowing in the mid-air.
Now among a thousand precipices my way wound round and round;
Flowers choked the path; I leaned against a rock; I swooned.

Roaring bears and howling dragons roused me—
Oh, the clamorous waters of the rapids!
I trembled in the deep forest, and shuddered at the overhanging crags, 
one heaped upon another.
Clouds on clouds gathered above, threatening rain;
The waters gushed below, breaking into mist.

A peal of blasting thunder!
The mountains crumbled.
The stone gate of the hollow heaven
Opened wide, revealing
A vasty realm of azure without bottom,
Sun and moon shining together on gold and silver palaces.

Clad in rainbow and riding on the wind,
The ladies of the air descended like flower, flakes;
The faery lords trooping in, they were thick as hemp-stalks in the fields.
Phoenix birds circled their cars, and panthers played upon harps.
Bewilderment filled me, and terror seized on my heart.
I lifted myself in amazement, and alas!
I woke and found my bed and pillow—
Gone was the radiant world of gossamer.

So with all pleasures of life.
All things pass with the east-flowing water.
I leave you and go—when shall I return?
Let the white roe feed at will among the green crags,
Let me ride and visit the lovely mountains!
How can I stoop obsequiously and serve the mighty ones!
It stifles my soul.


Written by Conrad Aiken | Create an image from this poem

Hatteras Calling

 Southeast, and storm, and every weathervane 
shivers and moans upon its dripping pin, 
ragged on chimneys the cloud whips, the rain 
howls at the flues and windows to get in, 
the golden rooster claps his golden wings 
and from the Baptist Chapel shrieks no more, 
the golden arrow in the southeast sings 
and hears on the roof the Atlantic Ocean roar. 
Waves among wires, sea scudding over poles, 
down every alley the magnificence of rain, 
dead gutters live once more, the deep manholes 
hollow in triumph a passage to the main. 
Umbrellas, and in the Gardens one old man 
hurries away along a dancing path, 
listens to music on a watering-can, 
observes among the tulips the sudden wrath, 
pale willows thrashing to the needled lake, 
and dinghies filled with water; while the sky 
smashes the lilacs, swoops to shake and break, 
till shattered branches shriek and railings cry. 
Speak, Hatteras, your language of the sea: 
scour with kelp and spindrift the stale street: 
that man in terror may learn once more to be 
child of that hour when rock and ocean meet.
Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Leather Leggings

 THEY have taken the ball of earth
 and made it a little thing.

They were held to the land and horses;
 they were held to the little seas.
They have changed and shaped and welded;
 they have broken the old tools and made
 new ones; they are ranging the white
 scarves of cloudland; they are bumping
 the sunken bells of the Carthaginians
 and Phœnicians:
 they are handling
 the strongest sea
 as a thing to be handled.

The earth was a call that mocked;
 it is belted with wires and meshed with
 steel; from Pittsburg to Vladivostok is
 an iron ride on a moving house; from
 Jerusalem to Tokyo is a reckoned span;
 and they talk at night in the storm and
 salt, the wind and the war.

They have counted the miles to the Sun
 and Canopus; they have weighed a small
 blue star that comes in the southeast
 corner of the sky on a foretold errand.

We shall search the sea again.
We shall search the stars again.
There are no bars across the way.
There is no end to the plan and the clue,
 the hunt and the thirst.
The motors are drumming, the leather leggings
 and the leather coats wait:
 Under the sea
 and out to the stars
 we go.

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry