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Best Famous Tooled Poems

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

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Written by Philip Levine | Create an image from this poem

At Bessemer

 19 years old and going nowhere, 
I got a ride to Bessemer and walked 
the night road toward Birmingham 
passing dark groups of men cursing 
the end of a week like every week. 
Out of town I found a small grove 
of trees, high narrow pines, and I 
sat back against the trunk of one 
as the first rains began slowly. 
South, the lights of Bessemer glowed 
as though a new sun rose there, 
but it was midnight and another shift 
tooled the rolling mills. I must 
have slept awhile, for someone 
else was there beside me. I could 
see a cigarette's soft light, 
and once a hand grazed mine, man 
or woman's I never knew. Slowly 
I could feel the darkness fill 
my eyes and the dream that came was 
of a bright world where sunlight 
fell on the long even rows of houses 
and I looked down from great height 
at a burned world I believed 
I never had to enter. When 
the true sun rose I was stiff 
and wet, and there beside me was 
the small white proof that someone 
rolled and smoked and left me there 
unharmed, truly untouched. 
A hundred yards off I could hear 
cars on the highway. A life 
was calling to be lived, but how 
and why I had still to learn.


Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

The Secret of the Machines

 We were taken from the ore-bed and the mine,
 We were melted in the furnace and the pit--
We were cast and wrought and hammered to design,
 We were cut and filed and tooled and gauged to fit.
Some water, coal, and oil is all we ask,
 And a thousandth of an inch to give us play:
And now, if you will set us to our task,
 We will serve you four and twenty hours a day!

 We can pull and haul and push and lift and drive,
 We can print and plough and weave and heat and light,
 We can run and race and swim and fly and dive,
 We can see and hear and count and read and write!

Would you call a friend from half across the world?
 If you'll let us have his name and town and state,
You shall see and hear your cracking question hurled
 Across the arch of heaven while you wait.
Has he answered? Does he need you at his side-
 You can start this very evening if you choose
And take the Western Ocean in the stride
 O seventy thousand horses and some screws!

 The boat-express is waiting your command!
 You will find the Mauritania at the quay,
 Till her captain turns the lever 'neath his hand,
 And the monstrouos nine-decked city goes to sea.

Do you wish to make the mountains bare their head
 And lay their new-cut forests at your feet?
Do you want to turn a river in its bed,
 Or plant a barren wilderness with wheat?
Shall we pipe aloft and bring you water down
 From the never-failing cisterns of the snows,
To work the mills and tramways in your town,
 And irrigate your orchards as it flows?

 It is easy! Give us dynamite and drills!
 Watch the iron-shouldered rocks lie down and quake,
 As the thirsty desert-level floods and fills,
 And the valley we have dammed becomes a lake.

But remember, please, the Law by which we live,
 We are not built to comprehend a lie,
We can neither love nor pity nor forgive.
 If you make a slip in handling us you die!
We are greater than the Peoples or the Kings-
 Be humble, as you crawl beneath our rods!--
 Our touch can alter all created things,
 We are everything on earth--except The Gods!

 Though our smoke may hide the Heavens from your eyes, 
 It will vanish and the stars will shine again,
 Because, for all our power and weight and size,
 We are nothing more than children of your brain!
Written by Barry Tebb | Create an image from this poem

The Philosophers

 Lavender musk rose from the volume I was reading through,

The college crest impressed in gold, tooled gold lettering on the spine.

It was not mine but my son’s, jammed in the corner of a cardboard box

With dozens more; just one box of a score, stored in a heap

Across my ex-wife’s floor, our son gone far, as far as Samarkand and Ind

To where his strange imaginings had led, to heat and dust, some lust

To know Bengali, to translate Tagore, or just, for all we know,

Stroll round those sordid alleys and bazaars and ask for toddy

If it’s still the same and say it in a tongue they know.

The Classics books lay everywhere around the flat, so many that my mind

Grew numb. Heavy, dusty dictionaries of Mandarin and Greek,

Crumbling Victorian commentaries where every men and de was weighed

And weighed again, and then, through a scholar’s gloss on Aristotle,

That single sentence glowed, ‘And thus we see nobility of soul

Comes only with the conquering of loss’; meaning shimmered in that empty space

Where we believed there was no way to resurrect two sons we’d watched grow up,

One lost to oriental heat and dust, the other to a fate of wards.

It seemed that rainy April Sunday in the musty book-lined rooms

Of Brenda’s flat, mourning the death of Beethoven, her favourite cat,

Watching Mozart’s ginger fur, his plaintive tone of loss, whether

Some miscreant albatross was laid across our deck, or bound around

The ship, or tangled about whatever destiny we moved towards

Across that frozen sea of dark extremity; fatigued as if our barque

Had hardly stirred for all those years of strife, for all the times

We’d set the compass right, sorted through those heaped up charts

And with fingers weary and bleary-eyed retraced our course.

The books, a thousand books that lined the walls:

Plato’s chariot racing across the empty sky,

Sartre’s waiters dancing like angels on the heads of pins,

And Wittgenstein, nodding in his smoke-filled Cambridge den,

Dreaming of a school room in the Austrian hills and walks

In mountain air, wondering why he wasn’t there.

We wondered, too, at what, if anything we knew, trying to sift some

Single fact that might elicit hope from loss, enough to get us through

Another year with other griefs to come, we knew. Some, by a little,

Through God’s grace or chance or simple will, we might delay.

More likely we would have no say. By words or actions who can stay

The rolling balls across the table’s baize, the click of ball on ball,

The line of bottles in the hall?

We heard the ticking of the Roman -figured clock

My mother made us take when all was lost,

Together until the last breath had flown

Into the blue empyrean with her soul.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things