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Best Famous Take Root Poems

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

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Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

That Day

 This is the desk I sit at
and this is the desk where I love you too much
and this is the typewriter that sits before me
where yesterday only your body sat before me
with its shoulders gathered in like a Greek chorus,
with its tongue like a king making up rules as he goes,
with its tongue quite openly like a cat lapping milk,
with its tongue -- both of us coiled in its slippery life.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your tongue, your tongue that came from your lips, two openers, half animals, half birds caught in the doorway of your heart.
That was the day I followed the king's rules, passing by your red veins and your blue veins, my hands down the backbone, down quick like a firepole, hands between legs where you display your inner knowledge, where diamond mines are buried and come forth to bury, come forth more sudden than some reconstructed city.
It is complete within seconds, that monument.
The blood runs underground yet brings forth a tower.
A multitude should gather for such an edifice.
For a miracle one stands in line and throws confetti.
Surely The Press is here looking for headlines.
Surely someone should carry a banner on the sidewalk.
If a bridge is constructed doesn't the mayor cut a ribbon? If a phenomenon arrives shouldn't the Magi come bearing gifts? Yesterday was the day I bore gifts for your gift and came from the valley to meet you on the pavement.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your face, your face after love, close to the pillow, a lullaby.
Half asleep beside me letting the old fashioned rocker stop, our breath became one, became a child-breath together, while my fingers drew little o's on your shut eyes, while my fingers drew little smiles on your mouth, while I drew I LOVE YOU on your chest and its drummer and whispered, "Wake up!" and you mumbled in your sleep, "Sh.
We're driving to Cape Cod.
We're heading for the Bourne Bridge.
We're circling the Bourne Circle.
" Bourne! Then I knew you in your dream and prayed of our time that I would be pierced and you would take root in me and that I might bring forth your born, might bear the you or the ghost of you in my little household.
Yesterday I did not want to be borrowed but this is the typewriter that sits before me and love is where yesterday is at.


Written by Elizabeth Bishop | Create an image from this poem

Songs For A Colored Singer

 I

A washing hangs upon the line, 
 but it's not mine.
None of the things that I can see belong to me.
The neighbors got a radio with an aerial; we got a little portable.
They got a lot of closet space; we got a suitcase.
I say, "Le Roy, just how much are we owing? Something I can't comprehend, the more we got the more we spend.
.
.
.
" He only answers, "Let's get going.
" Le Roy, you're earning too much money now.
I sit and look at our backyard and find it very hard.
What have we got for all his dollars and cents? --A pile of bottles by the fence.
He's faithful and he's kind but he sure has an inquiring mind.
He's seen a lot; he's bound to see the rest, and if I protest Le Roy answers with a frown, "Darling, when I earns I spends.
The world is wide; it still extends.
.
.
.
I'm going to get a job in the next town.
" Le Roy, you're earning too much money now.
II The time has come to call a halt; and so it ends.
He's gone off with his other friends.
He needn't try to make amends, this occasion's all his fault.
Through rain and dark I see his face across the street at Flossie's place.
He's drinking in the warm pink glow to th' accompaniment of the piccolo.
* The time has come to call a halt.
I met him walking with Varella and hit him twice with my umbrella.
Perhaps that occasion was my fault, but the time has come to call a halt.
Go drink your wine and go get tight.
Let the piccolo play.
I'm sick of all your fussing anyway.
Now I'm pursuing my own way.
I'm leaving on the bus tonight.
Far down the highway wet and black I'll ride and ride and not come back.
I'm going to go and take the bus and find someone monogamous.
The time has come to call a halt.
I've borrowed fifteen dollars fare and it will take me anywhere.
For this occasion's all his fault.
The time has come to call a halt.
*Jukebox III Lullaby.
Adult and child sink to their rest.
At sea the big ship sinks and dies, lead in its breast.
Lullaby.
Let mations rage, let nations fall.
The shadow of the crib makes an enormous cage upon the wall.
Lullaby.
Sleep on and on, war's over soon.
Drop the silly, harmless toy, pick up the moon.
Lullaby.
If they should say you have no sense, don't you mind them; it won't make much difference.
Lullaby.
Adult and child sink to their rest.
At sea the big ship sinks and dies, lead in its breast.
IV What's that shining in the leaves, the shadowy leaves, like tears when somebody grieves, shining, shining in the leaves? Is it dew or is it tears, dew or tears, hanging there for years and years like a heavy dew of tears? Then that dew begins to fall, roll down and fall, Maybe it's not tears at all.
See it, see it roll and fall.
Hear it falling on the ground, hear, all around.
That is not a tearful sound, beating, beating on the ground.
See it lying there like seeds, like black seeds.
see it taking root like weeds, faster, faster than the weeds, all the shining seeds take root, conspiring root, and what curious flower or fruit will grow from that conspiring root? fruit or flower? It is a face.
Yes, a face.
In that dark and dreary place each seed grows into a face.
Like an army in a dream the faces seem, darker, darker, like a dream.
They're too real to be a dream.
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

Here Died

 There's many a schoolboy's bat and ball that are gathering dust at home, 
For he hears a voice in the future call, and he trains for the war to come; 
A serious light in his eyes is seen as he comes from the schoolhouse gate; 
He keeps his kit and his rifle clean, and he sees that his back is straight.
But straight or crooked, or round, or lame – you may let these words take root; As the time draws near for the sterner game, all boys should learn to shoot, From the beardless youth to the grim grey-beard, let Australians ne'er forget, A lame limb never interfered with a brave man's shooting yet.
Over and over and over again, to you and our friends and me, The warning of danger has sounded plain – like the thud of a gun at sea.
The rich man turns to his wine once more, and the gay to their worldly joys, The "statesman" laughs at a hint of war – but something has told the boys.
The schoolboy scouts of the White Man's Land are out on the hills to-day; They trace the tracks from the sea-beach sand and sea-cliffs grim and grey; They take the range for a likely shot by every cape and head, And they spy the lay of each lonely spot where an enemy's foot might tread.
In the cooling breeze of the coastal streams, or out where the townships bake, They march in fancy, and fight in dreams, and die for Australia's sake.
They hold the fort till relief arrives, when the landing parties storm, And they take the pride of their fresh young lives in the set of a uniform.
Where never a loaded shell was hurled, nor a rifle fired to kill, The schoolboy scouts of the Southern World are choosing their Battery Hill.
They run the tapes on the flats and fells by roads that the guns might sweep, They are fixing in memory obstacles where the firing lines shall creep.
They read and they study the gunnery - they ask till the meaning's plain, But the craft of the scout is a simple thing to the young Australian brain.
They blaze the track for a forward run, where the scrub is everywhere, And they mark positions for every gun and every unit there.
They trace the track for a quick retreat – and the track for the other way round, And they mark the spot in the summer heat where the water is always found.
They note the chances of cliff and tide, and where they can move, and when, And every point where a man might hide in the days when they'll fight as men.
When silent men with their rifles lie by many a ferny dell; And turn their heads when a scout goes by, with a cheery growl "All's well"; And scouts shall climb by the fisherman's ways, and watch for a sign of ships, With stern eyes fixed on the threatening haze where the blue horizon dips.
When men shall camp in the dark and damp by the bough-marked battery, Between the forts and the open ports where the miners watch the sea; And talk perhaps of their boy-scout days, as they sit in their shelters rude, While motors race to the distant bays with ammunition and food.
When the city alight shall wait by night for news from a far-out post, And men ride down from the farming town to patrol the lonely coast – Till they hear the thud of a distant gun, or the distant rifles crack, And Australians spring to their arms as one to drive the invaders back.
There'll be no music or martial noise, save the guns to help you through, For a plain and shirt-sleeve job, my boys, is the job that we'll have to do.
And many of those who had learned to shoot – and in learning learned to teach – To the last three men, and the last galoot, shall die on some lonely beach.
But they'll waste their breath in no empty boast, and they'll prove to the world their worth, When the shearers rush to the Eastern Coast, and the miners rush to Perth.
And the man who fights in a Queenscliff fort, or up by Keppel Bay, Will know that his mates at Bunbury are doing their share that day.
There was never a land so great and wide, where the foreign fathers came, That has bred her children so much alike, with their hearts so much the same.
And sons shall fight by the mangrove creeks that lie on the lone East Coast, Who never shall know (or not for weeks) if the rest of Australia's lost.
And far in the future (I see it well, and born of such days as these), There lies an Australia invincible, and mistress of all her seas; With monuments standing on hill and head, where her sons shall point with pride To the names of Australia's bravest dead, carved under the words "Here died.
"
Written by Delmore Schwartz | Create an image from this poem

News Of The Gold World Of May

 News of the Gold World of May in Holland Michigan:
"Wooden shoes will clatter again
 on freshly scrubbed streets--"

The tulip will arise and reign again from awnings and
 windows
 of all colors and forms
 its vine, verve and valentine curves

 upon the city streets, the public grounds 
 and private lawns
 (wherever it is conceivable
 that a bulb might take root
 and the two lips, softly curved, come up 
 possessed by the skilled love and will of a ballerina.
) The citizens will dance in folk dances.
They will thump, they will pump, thudding and shoving elbow and thigh, bumping and laughing, like barrels and bells.
Vast fields of tulips in full bloom, the reproduction of a miniature Dutch village, part of a gigantic flower show.

Book: Shattered Sighs