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Best Famous Sunstruck Poems

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

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Written by Nazim Hikmet | Create an image from this poem

A Spring Piece Left In The Middle

 Taut, thick fingers punch
the teeth of my typewriter.
Three words are down on paper in capitals: SPRING SPRING SPRING.
.
.
And me -- poet, proofreader, the man who's forced to read two thousand bad lines every day for two liras-- why, since spring has come, am I still sitting here like a ragged black chair? My head puts on its cap by itself, I fly out of the printer's, I'm on the street.
The lead dirt of the composing room on my face, seventy-five cents in my pocket.
SPRING IN THE AIR.
.
.
In the barbershops they're powdering the sallow cheeks of the pariah of Publishers Row.
And in the store windows three-color bookcovers flash like sunstruck mirrors.
But me, I don't have even a book of ABC's that lives on this street and carries my name on its door! But what the hell.
.
.
I don't look back, the lead dirt of the composing room on my face, seventy-five cents in my pocket, SPRING IN THE AIR.
.
.
* The piece got left in the middle.
It rained and swamped the lines.
But oh! what I would have written.
.
.
The starving writer sitting on his three-thousand-page three-volume manuscript wouldn't stare at the window of the kebab joint but with his shining eyes would take the Armenian bookseller's dark plump daughter by storm.
.
.
The sea would start smelling sweet.
Spring would rear up like a sweating red mare and, leaping onto its bare back, I'd ride it into the water.
Then my typewriter would follow me every step of the way.
I'd say: "Oh, don't do it! Leave me alone for an hour.
.
.
" then my head-my hair failing out-- would shout into the distance: "I AM IN LOVE.
.
.
" * I'm twenty-seven, she's seventeen.
"Blind Cupid, lame Cupid, both blind and lame Cupid said, Love this girl," I was going to write; I couldn't say it but still can! But if it rained, if the lines I wrote got swamped, if I have twenty-five cents left in my pocket, what the hell.
.
.
Hey, spring is here spring is here spring spring is here! My blood is budding inside me! 20 and 21 April 1929


Written by Anna Akhmatova | Create an image from this poem

March Elegy

 I have enough treasures from the past
to last me longer than I need, or want.
You know as well as I .
.
.
malevolent memory won't let go of half of them: a modest church, with its gold cupola slightly askew; a harsh chorus of crows; the whistle of a train; a birch tree haggard in a field as if it had just been sprung from jail; a secret midnight conclave of monumental Bible-oaks; and a tiny rowboat that comes drifting out of somebody's dreams, slowly foundering.
Winter has already loitered here, lightly powdering these fields, casting an impenetrable haze that fills the world as far as the horizon.
I used to think that after we are gone there's nothing, simply nothing at all.
Then who's that wandering by the porch again and calling us by name? Whose face is pressed against the frosted pane? What hand out there is waving like a branch? By way of reply, in that cobwebbed corner a sunstruck tatter dances in the mirror.
Written by A E Housman | Create an image from this poem

The Merry Guide

 Once in the wind of morning
 I ranged the thymy wold;
The world-wide air was azure
 And all the brooks ran gold.
There through the dews beside me Behold a youth that trod, With feathered cap on forehead, And poised a golden rod.
With mien to match the morning And gay delightful guise And friendly brows and laughter He looked me in the eyes.
Oh whence, I asked, and whither? He smiled and would not say, And looked at me and beckoned And laughed and led the way.
And with kind looks and laughter And nought to say beside We two went on together, I and my happy guide.
Across the glittering pastures And empty upland still And solitude of shepherds High in the folded hill, By hanging woods and hamlets That gaze through orchards down On many a windmill turning And far-discovered town, With gay regards of promise And sure unslackened stride And smiles and nothing spoken Led on my merry guide.
By blowing realms of woodland With sunstruck vanes afield And cloud-led shadows sailing About the windy weald, By valley-guarded granges And silver waters wide, Content at heart I followed With my delightful guide.
And like the cloudy shadows Across the country blown We two fare on for ever, But not we two alone.
With the great gale we journey That breathes from gardens thinned, Borne in the drift of blossoms Whose petals throng the wind; Buoyed on the heaven-heard whisper Of dancing leaflets whirled >From all the woods that autumn Bereaves in all the world.
And midst the fluttering legion Of all that ever died I follow, and before us Goes the delightful guide, With lips that brim with laughter But never once respond, And feet that fly on feathers, And serpent-circled wand.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things