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Best Famous Wetted Poems

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

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Written by Ted Hughes | Create an image from this poem

The Owl

 I saw my world again through your eyes
As I would see it again through your children's eyes.
Through your eyes it was foreign.
Plain hedge hawthorns were peculiar aliens, A mystery of peculiar lore and doings.
Anything wild, on legs, in your eyes Emerged at a point of exclamation As if it had appeared to dinner guests In the middle of the table.
Common mallards Were artefacts of some unearthliness, Their wooings were a hypnagogic film Unreeled by the river.
Impossible To comprehend the comfort of their feet In the freezing water.
You were a camera Recording reflections you could not fathom.
I made my world perform its utmost for you.
You took it all in with an incredulous joy Like a mother handed her new baby By the midwife.
Your frenzy made me giddy.
It woke up my dumb, ecstatic boyhood Of fifteen years before.
My masterpiece Came that black night on the Grantchester road.
I sucked the throaty thin woe of a rabbit Out of my wetted knuckle, by a copse Where a tawny owl was enquiring.
Suddenly it swooped up, splaying its pinions Into my face, taking me for a post.


Written by Charles Sorley | Create an image from this poem

Barbury Camp

 We burrowed night and day with tools of lead,
Heaped the bank up and cast it in a ring
And hurled the earth above.
And Caesar said, “Why, it is excellent.
I like the thing.
” We, who are dead, Made it, and wrought, and Caesar liked the thing.
And here we strove, and here we felt each vein Ice-bound, each limb fast-frozen, all night long.
And here we held communion with the rain That lashed us into manhood with its thong, Cleansing through pain.
And the wind visited us and made us strong.
Up from around us, numbers without name, Strong men and naked, vast, on either hand Pressing us in, they came.
And the wind came And bitter rain, turning grey all the land.
That was our game, To fight with men and storms, and it was grand.
For many days we fought them, and our sweat Watered the grass, making it spring up green, Blooming for us.
And, if the wind was wet, Our blood wetted the wind, making it keen With the hatred And wrath and courage that our blood had been.
So, fighting men and winds and tempests, hot With joy and hate and battle-lust, we fell Where we fought.
And God said, “Killed at last then? What! Ye that are too strong for heaven, too clean for hell, (God said) stir not.
This be your heaven, or, if ye will, your hell.
” So again we fight and wrestle, and again Hurl the earth up and cast it in a ring.
But when the wind comes up, driving the rain (Each rain-drop a fiery steed), and the mists rolling Up from the plain, This wild procession, this impetuous thing.
Hold us amazed.
We mount the wind-cars, then Whip up the steeds and drive through all the world, Searching to find somewhere some brethren, Sons of the winds and waters of the world.
We, who were men, Have sought, and found no men in all this world.
Wind, that has blown here always ceaselessly, Bringing, if any man can understand, Might to the mighty, freedom to the free; Wind, that has caught us, cleansed us, made us grand, Wind that is we (We that were men)—make men in all this land, That so may live and wrestle and hate that when They fall at last exultant, as we fell, And come to God, God may say, “Do you come then Mildly enquiring, is it heaven or hell? Why! Ye were men! Back to your winds and rains.
Be these your heaven and hell!”
Written by Ann Taylor | Create an image from this poem

For a Naughty Little Girl

 My sweet little girl should be cheerful and mild
She must not be fretful and cry! 
Oh! why is this passion? remember, my child, 
GOD sees you, who lives in the sky.
That dear little face, that I like so to kiss, How alter'd and sad it appears! Do you think I can love you so naughty as this, Or kiss you, all wetted with tears? Remember, though GOD is in Heaven, my love, He sees you within and without, And always looks down, from His glory above, To notice what you are about.
If I am not with you, or if it be dark, And nobody is in the way, His eye is as able your doings to mark, In the night as it is in the day.
Then dry up your tears and look smiling again, And never do things that are wrong; For I'm sure you must feel it a terrible pain, To be naughty and crying so long.
We'll pray, then, that GOD may your passion forgive, And teach you from evil to fly; And then you'll be happy as long as you live, And happy whenever you die.
Written by Adela Florence Cory Nicolson | Create an image from this poem

Story of Lilavanti

   They lay the slender body down
     With all its wealth of wetted hair,
   Only a daughter of the town,
     But very young and slight and fair.

   The eyes, whose light one cannot see,
     Are sombre doubtless, like the tresses,
   The mouth's soft curvings seem to be
     A roseate series of caresses.

   And where the skin has all but dried
     (The air is sultry in the room)
   Upon her breast and either side,
     It shows a soft and amber bloom.

   By women here, who knew her life,
     A leper husband, I am told,
   Took all this loveliness to wife
     When it was barely ten years old.

   And when the child in shocked dismay
     Fled from the hated husband's care
   He caught and tied her, so they say,
     Down to his bedside by her hair.

   To some low quarter of the town,
     Escaped a second time, she flew;
   Her beauty brought her great renown
     And many lovers here she knew,

   When, as the mystic Eastern night
     With purple shadow filled the air,
   Behind her window framed in light,
     She sat with jasmin in her hair.

   At last she loved a youth, who chose
     To keep this wild flower for his own,
   He in his garden set his rose
     Where it might bloom for him alone.

   Cholera came; her lover died,
     Want drove her to the streets again,
   And women found her there, who tried
     To turn her beauty into gain.

   But she who in those garden ways
     Had learnt of Love, would now no more
   Be bartered in the market place
     For silver, as in days before.

   That former life she strove to change;
     She sold the silver off her arms,
   While all the world grew cold and strange
     To broken health and fading charms.

   Till, finding lovers, but no friend,
     Nor any place to rest or hide,
   She grew despairing at the end,
     Slipped softly down a well and died.

   And yet, how short, when all is said,
     This little life of love and tears!
   Her age, they say, beside her bed,
     To-day is only fifteen years.
Written by Fernando Pessoa | Create an image from this poem

The edge of the green wave whitely doth hiss

The edge of the green wave whitely doth hiss

Upon the wetted sand. I look, yet dream.

Surely reality cannot be this!

Somehow, somewhere this surely doth but seem!

The sky, the sea, this great extent disclosed

Of outward joy, this bulk of life we feel,

Is not something, but something interposed.

Only what in this is not this is real.

If this be to have sense, if to be awake

Be but to see this bright, great sleep of things,

For the rarer potion mine own dreams I'll take

And for truth commune with imaginings,

Holding a dream too bitter, a too fair curse,

This common sleep of men, the universe.



Book: Shattered Sighs