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Best Famous Swan Song Poems

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

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Written by Billy Jno Hope | Create an image from this poem

i wrote a life

 this might be the swan song
i have traveled beyond misty mountains
spilled my seed on the hungry rock
hallowed days
blasphemous timelines
art nourishment
prolific like sin
to the serpent edge of youth
once my head rolled in the streets
motors crashing by
inches from my intoxication
a fleshful laugh echoed in time
a mad initiation as part of the door
to the unrepentant lyric
heathen apprentices
i cracked the demon-s egg
tattooed pandora-s eye
with rage, blissillusion
madness conceived
a life, my methadone(placebo)


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

Music In The Bush

 O'er the dark pines she sees the silver moon,
 And in the west, all tremulous, a star;
And soothing sweet she hears the mellow tune
 Of cow-bells jangled in the fields afar.

Quite listless, for her daily stent is done,
 She stands, sad exile, at her rose-wreathed door,
And sends her love eternal with the sun
 That goes to gild the land she'll see no more.

The grave, gaunt pines imprison her sad gaze,
 All still the sky and darkling drearily;
She feels the chilly breath of dear, dead days
 Come sifting through the alders eerily.

Oh, how the roses riot in their bloom!
 The curtains stir as with an ancient pain;
Her old piano gleams from out the gloom
 And waits and waits her tender touch in vain.

But now her hands like moonlight brush the keys
 With velvet grace -- melodious delight;
And now a sad refrain from over seas
 Goes sobbing on the bosom of the night;

And now she sings. (O! singer in the gloom,
 Voicing a sorrow we can ne'er express,
Here in the Farness where we few have room
 Unshamed to show our love and tenderness,

Our hearts will echo, till they beat no more,
 That song of sadness and of motherland;
And, stretched in deathless love to England's shore,
 Some day she'll hearken and she'll understand.)

A prima-donna in the shining past,
 But now a mother growing old and gray,
She thinks of how she held a people fast
 In thrall, and gleaned the triumphs of a day.

She sees a sea of faces like a dream;
 She sees herself a queen of song once more;
She sees lips part in rapture, eyes agleam;
 She sings as never once she sang before.

She sings a wild, sweet song that throbs with pain,
 The added pain of life that transcends art --
A song of home, a deep, celestial strain,
 The glorious swan-song of a dying heart.

A lame tramp comes along the railway track,
 A grizzled dog whose day is nearly done;
He passes, pauses, then comes slowly back
 And listens there -- an audience of one.

She sings -- her golden voice is passion-fraught,
 As when she charmed a thousand eager ears;
He listens trembling, and she knows it not,
 And down his hollow cheeks roll bitter tears.

She ceases and is still, as if to pray;
 There is no sound, the stars are all alight --
Only a wretch who stumbles on his way,
 Only a vagrant sobbing in the night.
Written by Gerald Stern | Create an image from this poem

Swan Song

 A bunch of old snakeheads down by the pond
carrying on the swan tradition -- hissing
inside their white bodies, raising and lowering their heads
like ostriches, regretting only the sad ritual
that forced them to waddle back into the water
after their life under the rocks, wishing they could lie again
 in the sun

and dream of spreading their terrifying wings;
wishing, this time, they could sail through the sky like
 horses,
their tails rigid, their white manes fluttering,
their mouths open, their sharp teeth flashing,
drops of mercy pouring from their eyes,
bolts of wisdom from their foreheads.

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry