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Best Famous Trivia Poems

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

Search and read the best famous Trivia poems, articles about Trivia poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Trivia poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

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Written by Jennifer Reeser | Create an image from this poem

Elizabeth Leaves A Letter For Dr. Frankenstein

 Whether the clouds had abandoned Geneva that evening
no one can say now, but what I remember are roses
bruised at their edges, and china cups yellowed with age.
“I am too sick of interior vapors,” I told you, “Find us a corner of sunlight, and hammer it down.
.
.
Tell me again I’m so lovely the insects won’t bite.
” Do you remember it, Victor? A time before pleasure turned into sacrilege hungry to threaten the dead.
So many secrets you whispered -- but I, like a child drawn to myself, hale and hearty to hear my own weeping, bored by your ghost stories, left you both late and too soon.
Sunshine deserted or altered the tops of the grasses subtly, with each changing breeze, as the shadows required -- dark, but not black, like my hair; and you claimed that each instant some auburn-browed woman appeared, I re-entered your mind.
Later or sooner, our futures will enter it, too.
Now, though, it seems hope’s a difficult vision to conjure; what you imagine of beauty so lodged in grim trivia even the sentences spoken inside it are dark.
Mourning will fade, though, I know -- like your Ingolstadt nightmare.
Bells will resound.
I will come to you.
All will be well.


Written by Dorothy Parker | Create an image from this poem

The Searched Soul

 When I consider, pro and con, 
What things my love is built upon -- 
A curly mouth; a sinewed wrist; 
A questioning brow; a pretty twist 
Of words as old and tried as sin; 
A pointed ear; a cloven chin; 
Long, tapered limbs; and slanted eyes 
Not cold nor kind nor darkly wise -- 
When so I ponder, here apart, 
What shallow boons suffice my heart, 
What dust-bound trivia capture me, 
I marvel at my normalcy.
Written by Barry Tebb | Create an image from this poem

OBSTACLES

 A thousand visits to the supermarket

A thousand acts of sexual intimacy

Spread over forty years.
Your essence was quite other A smile of absolute connection Repeated a thousand times.
Your daily visits to the outside lavatory While I stood talking outside, An intimacy I have sought With no other.
My greatest fear is that you might Have changed beyond recognition, Submerged in trivia and the Minutiae of the quotidian.
At ten my adoration of you was total.
At sixty it’s somewhat greater: I place you among the angels and madonnas Of the quattrocento, Raphael and Masaccio And Petrarch’s sonnets to Laura.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things