Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Uncoil Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by Rainer Maria Rilke | Create an image from this poem

Spanish Dancer

As on all its sides a kitchen-match darts white
flickering tongues before it bursts into flame:
with the audience around her, quickened, hot,
her dance begins to flicker in the dark room.

And all at once it is completely fire.

One upward glance and she ignites her hair
and, whirling faster and faster, fans her dress
into passionate flames, till it becomes a furnace
from which, like startled rattlesnakes, the long
naked arms uncoil, aroused and clicking.

And then: as if the fire were too tight
around her body, she takes and flings it out
haughtily, with an imperious gesture,
and watches: it lies raging on the floor,
still blazing up, and the flames refuse to die -
Till, moving with total confidence and a sweet
exultant smile, she looks up finally
and stamps it out with powerful small feet. 


Written by John Greenleaf Whittier | Create an image from this poem

What the Birds Said

 The birds against the April wind 
Flew northward, singing as they flew; 
They sang, "The land we leave behind 
Has swords for corn-blades, blood for dew." 

"O wild-birds, flying from the South, 
What saw and heard ye, gazing down?" 
"We saw the mortar's upturned mouth, 
The sickened camp, the blazing town! 

"Beneath the bivouac's starry lamps, 
We saw your march-worn children die; 
In shrouds of moss, in cypress swamps, 
We saw your dead uncoffined lie. 

"We heard the starving prisoner's sighs 
And saw, from line and trench, your sons 
Follow our flight with home-sick eyes 
Beyond the battery's smoking guns." 

"And heard and saw ye only wrong 
And pain," I cried, "O wing-worn flocks?" 
"We heard," they sang, "the freedman's song, 
The crash of Slavery's broken locks! 

"We saw from new, uprising States 
The treason-nursing mischief spurned, 
As, crowding Freedom's ample gates, 
The long-estranged and lost returned. 

"O'er dusky faces, seamed and old, 
And hands horn-hard with unpaid toil, 
With hope in every rustling fold, 
We saw your star-dropt flag uncoil. 

"And struggling up through sounds accursed, 
A grateful murmur clomb the air; 
A whisper scarcely heard at first, 
It filled the listening heavens with prayer. 

"And sweet and far, as from a star, 
Replied a voice which shall not cease, 
Till, drowning all the noise of war, 
It sings the blessed song of peace!" 

So to me, in a doubtful day 
Of chill and slowly greening spring, 
Low stooping from the cloudy gray, 
The wild-birds sang or seemed to sing. 

They vanished in the misty air, 
The song went with them in their flight; 
But lo! they left the sunset fair, 
And in the evening there was light.
Written by Robert Browning | Create an image from this poem

Never The Time And The Place

 Never the time and the place
And the loved one all together!
This path--how soft to pace!
This May -- what magic weather!
Where is the loved one's face?
In a dream that loved one's face meets mine,
But the house is narrow, the place is bleak
Where, outside, rain and wind combine
With a furtive ear, if I strive to speak,
With a hostile eye at my flushing cheek,
With a malice that marks each word, each sign!
O enemy sly and serpentine,
Uncoil thee from the waking man!
Do I hold the Past
Thus firm and fast
Yet doubt if the Future hold I can?
This path so soft to pace shall lead
Thro' the magic of May to herself indeed!
Or narrow if needs the house must be,
Outside are the storms and strangers: we
Oh, close, safe, warm sleep I and she, --
I and she!

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry