Poems With Descriptive Language - Page 2

  1. Out Out

    Famous Poem

    Out, Out by Robert Frost is a narrative poem published in a collection of poems titled Mountain Interval in 1916 when millions of young men were losing their lives on the battlefields of World War I. On an American farm a hungry young boy is cutting wood with a buzz saw. Frost uses personification with the saw and an artist's imagery to narrate as the boy loses his hand and then his life in terrible yet mundane detail.

    in Famous Narrative Poems

    The buzz-saw snarled and rattled in the yard
    And made dust and dropped stove-length sticks of wood,
    Sweet-scented stuff when the breeze drew across it.
    And from there those that lifted eyes could count

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  2. The Summer

    • By Sydney Harris
    • Published by Family Friend Poems June 2019 with permission of the Author.

    Hello, I am Sydney Harris, and I am in fifth grade. I love to write and dance. I am very inspired by other poets' poetry. I am originally from California and now I live in London. Enjoy my poem!

    in Beach Poems

    The saffron-yellow sun grins on top of the beige sand,
    and the aquamarine waves wash up onto the seashore.
    The towering palm trees sway from side to side
    as the gentle wind whistles through the beach.

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  4. Birches

    Famous Poem

    "Birches" was first published in the Atlantic Monthly in 1915. The poem about the Birch tree with branches weighed heavy with ice and snow is one of Frost's most famous poems.

    in Famous Nature Poems

    When I see birches bend to left and right
    Across the lines of straighter darker trees,
    I like to think some boy's been swinging them.
    But swinging doesn't bend them down to stay

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    I love this poem. It make me appreciate what the writer had done.

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  5. The Childhood Song

    • By Kellie Carra
    • Published by Family Friend Poems March 2018 with permission of the Author.

    This poem is about running back to your childhood once you've grown up, only to find things have drastically changed over the years.

    in Growing Up Poems

    Leaves dusted with white
    Moon reflects through the night
    Off the blanketed ground of sheer winter

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  7. Old Folks Laugh

    Famous Poem

    In "Old Folks Laugh," Maya Angelou explores a freedom that comes with old age. The poem contrasts the constrained and self-conscious behavior of young people with the unbridled laughter in old age. The imagery in the poem is vivid, describing the belly of old folks that jiggle like tambourines when they laugh, and their heads that wobble on brittle necks. The poem suggests that laughter allows the elderly to let go of their past regrets and pain and embrace the joy of the moment. Additionally, the poem implies that old folks have a certain wisdom, having lived through the best and the worst of times.

    in Famous Family Poems

    They have spent their
    content of simpering,
    holding their lips this
    and that way, winding

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  8. After Auschwitz

    Famous Poem

    Anne Sexton's poem "After Auschwitz" is a powerful emotional response to the Holocaust and slaughter of 6 million innocent Jewish men, women and children.. The speaker expresses anger towards the atrocities committed and questions why death doesn't seem to take those who deserve it. She condemns the men responsible for the Holocaust and suggests that all humanity must now bear guilt. For the depravity that the Nazis exhibited, demonstrated that all of us are capable of the same and that is a burden humanity must forever bear.

    in Famous Sad Poems

    Anger,
    as black as a hook,
    overtakes me.
    Each day,

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