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Best Famous Yearlong Poems

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

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

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Written by William Rose Benet | Create an image from this poem

Mad Blake

 Blake saw a treeful of angels at Peckham Rye, 
And his hands could lay hold on the tiger's terrible heart. 
Blake knew how deep is Hell, and Heaven how high, 
And could build the universe from one tiny part. 
Blake heard the asides of God, as with furrowed brow 
He sifts the star-streams between the Then and the Now, 
In vast infant sagacity brooding, an infant's grace 
Shining serene on his simple, benignant face. 

Blake was mad, they say, -- and Space's Pandora-box 
Loosed its wonders upon him -- devils, but angels indeed. 
I, they say, am sane, but no key of mine unlocks 
One lock of one gate wherethrough Heaven's glory is freed. 
And I stand and I hold my breath, daylong, yearlong, 
Out of comfort and easy dreaming evermore starting awake, -- 
Yearning beyond all sanity for some echo of that Song 
Of Songs that was sung to the soul of the madman, Blake!


Written by Conrad Aiken | Create an image from this poem

The Carver

 See, as the carver carves a rose, 
A wing, a toad, a serpent's eye, 
In cruel granite, to disclose 
The soft things that in hardness lie, 
So this one, taking up his heart, 
Which time and change had made a stone, 
Carved out of it with dolorous art, 
Laboring yearlong and alone, 
The thing there hidden—rose, toad, wing? 
A frog's hand on a lily pad? 
Bees in a cobweb?—no such thing! 
A girl's head was the thing he had, 
Small, shapely, richly crowned with hair, 
Drowsy, with eyes half closed, as they 
Looked through you and beyond you, clear 
To something farther than Cathay: 
Saw you, yet counted you not worth 
The seeing, thinking all the while 
How, flower-like, beauty comes to birth; 
And thinking this, began to smile. 
Medusa! For she could not see 
The world she turned to stone and ash. 
Only herself she saw, a tree 
That flowered beneath a lightning-flash. 
Thus dreamed her face—a lovely thing 
To worship, weep for, or to break . . . 
Better to carve a claw, a wing, 
Or, if the heart provide, a snake.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things