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Famous Storey Poems by Famous Poets

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

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by Tebb, Barry
...by the Council’s Transpennine

Trail opposite the bricked and boarded up Hunslet

Mills with trees growing from its top storey, roofless,

Open to the enormous skies of our childhood.



The Aire Suspension Bridge, always my bridge,

Has gone from wartime camouflage grey to

Council green with a traffic island in between

The lanes where lorries roar and silent anglers

Stitched along the shore shelter under the

Giant red, green and yellow umbrellas of Monet.



In t...Read more of this...



by Levertov, Denise
...orsemen be stationed at the rim of it, and a dog,
always alert on the brink of sleep.
Let the space under the first storey be dark, let the water lap the stone posts, and vivid green slime glimmer upon them; let a boat be kept there.
Let the caryatids of the second storey be bears upheld on beams that are dragons.
On the parapet of the central room, let there be four
archers, looking off to the four horizons. Within, 
let the prince be at home, let him sit in ...Read more of this...

by McGonagall, William Topaz
...which to feed,
So that the fire spread with awful rapidity,
And in twenty minutes the building was doomed to the fourth storey. 

The firemen wrought with might and main,
But still the fire did on them gain,
That it was two hours before they could reach the second floor,
The heat being so intense they could scarcely it endure. 

And inside all the time a woman and six children were there,
And when the firemen saw them, in amazement they did stare;
The sight that met t...Read more of this...

by Masefield, John
...felt. 
The narrow station-wall's brick ledge, 
The wild hop withering in the hedge, 
The lights in huntsmans' upper storey 
Were parts of an eternal glory, 
Were God's eternal garden flowers. 
I stood in bliss at this for hours.

O glory of the lighted soul. 
The dawn came up on Bradlow Knoll, 
The dawn with glittering on the grasses, 
The dawn which pass and never passes.

"It's dawn," I said, "And chimney's smoking, 
And all the blessed fields are soakin...Read more of this...

by Chaucer, Geoffrey
...> Gite: gown or coat; French "jupe."

4. Soler Hall: the hall or college at Cambridge with the gallery
or upper storey; supposed to have been Clare Hall.
(Transcribers note: later commentators identify it with King's
Hall, now merged with Trinity College)

5. Manciple: steward; provisioner of the hall. See also note 47
to the prologue to the Tales.

6. Testif: headstrong, wild-brained; French, "entete."

7. Strother: Tyrwhitt points to Anst...Read more of this...



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