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Famous Childbirth Poems by Famous Poets

These are examples of famous Childbirth poems written by some of the greatest and most-well-known modern and classical poets. PoetrySoup is a great educational poetry resource of famous childbirth poems. These examples illustrate what a famous childbirth poem looks like and its form, scheme, or style (where appropriate).

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by Service, Robert William
...ghin' sad;
But with tiny toddlers what
 Sport he had!

Might have had a brood, they said,
 Of his own;
Lost his wife in childbirth bed,
 Left him lone . . .
Well, now he is cold an' still,
 Here's to him:
Kids an' mothers always will
 Bless old Jim....Read more of this...



by Sexton, Anne
...words like bullets.
But I have forgotten the last guest--terror.
Unlike them, I cannot toss in the cabin
as in childbirth.
Now always leaving me in the West
is the wake,
a ragged bridal veil, unexplained,
seductive, always rushing down the stairs,
never detained, never enough.

The ship goes on
as though nothing else were happening.
Generation after generation,
I go her way.
She will run East, knot by knot, over an old bloodstream,
stripping it clear,...Read more of this...

by Pinsky, Robert
...onor, while the other cousin sails

In the belly of a slaveship to the port
Of Baltimore where she is raped
And dies in childbirth, but the infant
Will marry a Seminole and in the next
Chorus of time their child fathers
A great Hawk or Bird, with many followers
Among them this great-grandchild of the Jewish
Manager of a Pushkin estate, blowing

His American breath out into the wiggly
Tune uncurling its triplets and sixteenths--the Ginza
Samba of breath and brass, the reed
Vib...Read more of this...

by Lawson, Henry
...n – 
And that's how the land was won! 

Starvation and toil on the tracks they went, 
And death by the lonely way; 
The childbirth under the tilt or tent, 
The childbirth under the dray! 
The childbirth out in the desolate hut 
With a half-wild gin for nurse – 
That's how the first were born to bear 
The brunt of the first man's curse! 

They toiled and they fought through the shame of it – 
Through wilderness, flood, and drought; 
They worked, in the struggles of early days,...Read more of this...

by Marvell, Andrew
...d, can Archimedes self put down, 
For an experiment upon the crown, 
She p?rfected that engine, oft assayed, 
How after childbirth to renew a maid, 
And found how royal heirs might be matured 
In fewer months than mothers once endured. 
Hence Crowther made the rare inventress free 
Of's Higness's Royal Society-- 
Happiest of women, if she were but able 
To make her glassen Dukes once malle?ble! 
Paint her with oyster lip and breath of fame, 
Wide mouth that 'sparagus may ...Read more of this...



by Whittier, John Greenleaf
...y." 

She wedded a man unlearned and poor, 
And many children played round her door. 

But care and sorrow, and childbirth pain, 
Left their traces on heart and brain. 

And oft, when the summer sun shone hot 
On the new-mown hay in the meadow lot, 

And she heard the little spring brook fall 
Over the roadside, through a wall, 

In the shade of the apple-tree again 
She saw a rider draw his rein; 

And, gazing down with timid grace, 
She felt his pleased eyes rea...Read more of this...

by Lawson, Henry
...about, 
Through hopeless desolation, 
Through flood and fever, fire and drought, 
And slavery and starvation; 
Through childbirth, sickness, hurt, and blight, 
And nervousness an' scarin', 
Through bein' left alone at night, 
I've got to be past carin'. 
Past botherin' or carin', 
Past feelin' and past carin'; 
Through city cheats and neighbours' spite, 
I've come to be past carin'. 

Our first child took, in days like these, 
A cruel week in dyin', 
All day upon her...Read more of this...

by Masefield, John
...'ve had the best we had to give, 
The only three the Lord let live.

"For Minnie whom I love the worst 
Died mad in childbirth with her first. 
And John and Mary died of measles, 
And Rob was drowned at the Teasels. 
And little Nan, dear little sweet, 
A cart run over in the street; 
Her little shift was all one stain, 
I prayed God put her out of pain. 
And all the rest are gone or going 
The road to hell, and there's no knowing 
For all I've done and all I'v...Read more of this...

by Kumin, Maxine
...tic he always hears the ghosts
of Lucas Harrison's great trees complain
chafing against their mortised pegs,
a woman in childbirth pitching from side to side
until the wet head crowns between her legs
again, and again she will bear her man astride
and out of the brawl of sons he will drive like oxen
tight at the block and tackle, whipped to the trace,
come up these burly masts, these crossties broken
from their growing and buttoned into place.

Whatever it was is now a li...Read more of this...

by Bishop, Elizabeth
...ho got pensioned;

deaths, deaths and sicknesses;
the year he remarried;
the year (something) happened.
She died in childbirth.
That was the son lost
when the schooner foundered.

He took to drink. Yes.
She went to the bad.
When Amos began to pray
even in the store and
finally the family had
to put him away.

"Yes . . ." that peculiar
affirmative. "Yes . . ."
A sharp, indrawn breath,
half groan, half acceptance,
that mea...Read more of this...

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Book: Reflection on the Important Things