Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Washboard Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Abortion

 Somebody who should have been born 
is gone.
Just as the earth puckered its mouth, each bud puffing out from its knot, I changed my shoes, and then drove south.
Up past the Blue Mountains, where Pennsylvania humps on endlessly, wearing, like a crayoned cat, its green hair, its roads sunken in like a gray washboard; where, in truth, the ground cracks evilly, a dark socket from which the coal has poured, Somebody who should have been born is gone.
the grass as bristly and stout as chives, and me wondering when the ground would break, and me wondering how anything fragile survives; up in Pennsylvania, I met a little man, not Rumpelstiltskin, at all, at all.
.
.
he took the fullness that love began.
Returning north, even the sky grew thin like a high window looking nowhere.
The road was as flat as a sheet of tin.
Somebody who should have been born is gone.
Yes, woman, such logic will lead to loss without death.
Or say what you meant, you coward.
.
.
this baby that I bleed.


Written by James A Emanuel | Create an image from this poem

Mahalia Jackson

 « I sing the LORD'S songs »
(palms once tough to stay alive,
alarm clock on five).
Cinnamon cheeks, Lord, cornbread smile.
SONGS feed your ribs when you're hungry, chile.
Washboard certainties, soldierly grace, text and style in her brimming face.
Your hand on your heart, her voice in your ear: pilgrim, rest easy.
Sit here.
Written by Howard Nemerov | Create an image from this poem

The Lobster

 Here at the Super Duper, in a glass tank
Supplied by a rill of cold fresh water
Running down a glass washboard at one end
And siphoned off at the other, and so
Perpetually renewed, a herd of lobster
Is made available to the customer
Who may choose whichever one he wants
To carry home and drop into boiling water
And serve with a sauce of melted butter.
Meanwhile, the beauty of strangeness marks These creatures, who move (when they do) With a slow, vague wavering of claws, The somnambulist¹s effortless clambering As he crawls over the shell of a dream Resembling himself.
Their velvet colors, Mud red, bruise purple, cadaver green Speckled with black, their camouflage at home, Make them conspicuous here in the strong Day-imitating light, the incommensurable Philosophers and at the same time victims Herded together in the marketplace, asleep Except for certain tentative gestures Of their antennae, or their imperial claws Pegged shut with a whittled stick at the wrist.
We inlanders, buying our needful food, Pause over these slow, gigantic spiders That spin not.
We pause and are bemused, And sometimes it happens that a mind sinks down To the blind abyss in a swirl of sand, goes cold And archaic in a carapace of horn, Thinking: There's something underneath the world.
The flame beneath the pot that boils the water.

Book: Shattered Sighs