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The term "G-Unit Tank Tops" has been searched for 1116 times on the American Poems site since July 30th, 2005.
Search Results: 0 poets and 25 poems matched this query.
Expanded Search: Find books about G-Unit Tank Tops
1. Unit, like Death, for Whom? - written by Emily Dickinson
From Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson.
Published in 1955.
Read 1822 times on American Poems.
Unit, like Death, for Whom?
True, like the Tomb,
Who tells no secret
Told to Him --
The Grave is strict --
Tickets admit
Just two -- the Bearer --
And the Borne --
And seat -- just One --
The Living -- tell --
The Dying -- but a Syllable --
The Coy... (Read full poem)
2. Butch Weldy - written by Edgar Lee Masters
Read 1017 times on American Poems.
After I got religion and steadied down
They gave me a job in the canning works,
And every morning I had to fill
The tank in the yard with gasoline,
That fed the blow-fires in the sheds
To heat the soldering irons.
And I mounted a rickety... (Read full poem)
3. When we stand on the tops of Things - written by Emily Dickinson
From Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson.
Published in 1955.
Read 1826 times on American Poems.
When we stand on the tops of Things --
And like the Trees, look down --
The smoke all cleared away from it --
And Mirrors on the scene --
Just laying light -- no soul will wink
Except it have the flaw --
The Sound ones, like the Hills -- shall... (Read full poem)
4. It's thoughts -- and just One Heart - written by Emily Dickinson
From Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson.
Published in 1955.
Read 1446 times on American Poems.
It's thoughts -- and just One Heart --
And Old Sunshine -- about --
Make frugal -- Ones -- Content --
And two or three -- for Company --
Upon a Holiday --
Crowded -- as Sacrament --
Books -- when the Unit --
Spare the Tenant -- long eno' --
A... (Read full poem)
5. Alone - written by Deborah Ager
From La Petite Zine.
Read 11291 times on American Poems.
Over the fence, the dead settle in
for a journey. Nine o'clock.
You are alone for the first time
today. Boys asleep. Husband out.
A beer bottle sweats in your hand,
and sea lavender clogs the air
with perfume. Think of yourself.
Your arms... (Read full poem)
6. Despair - written by Anne Sexton
Read 8198 times on American Poems.
Who is he?
A railroad track toward hell?
Breaking like a stick of furniture?
The hope that suddenly overflows the cesspool?
The love that goes down the drain like spit?
The love that said forever, forever
and then runs you over like a truck?
Are you... (Read full poem)
7. Even This - written by Reginald Shepherd
Read 617 times on American Poems.
At that time I didn't understand
snow, the absence inside July,
water and what holds the water
in. Heard "It takes more than a forest
to make a tree" in no one's voice. By then
the word meridian was extinct, echo
without a face to place it, make... (Read full poem)
8. In Back Of The Real - written by Allen Ginsberg
From Howl and Other Poems.
Published in 1954.
Read 7092 times on American Poems.
railroad yard in San Jose
I wandered desolate
in front of a tank factory
and sat on a bench
near the switchman's shack.
A flower lay on the hay on
the asphalt highway
--the dread hay flower
I thought--It had a
brittle... (Read full poem)
9. The Poem You Asked For - written by Larry Levis
From Wrecking Crew, University of Pittsburgh Press .
Published in 1972.
Read 3116 times on American Poems.
My poem would eat nothing.
I tried giving it water
but it said no,
worrying me.
Day after day,
I held it up to the llight,
turning it over,
but it only pressed its lips
more tightly together.
It grew sullen, like a toad
through... (Read full poem)
10. Justice Arnett - written by Edgar Lee Masters
Read 651 times on American Poems.
It is true, fellow citizens,
That my old docket lying there for years
On a shelf above my head and over
The seat of justice, I say it is true
That docket had an iron rim
Which gashed my baldness when it fell --
(Somehow I think it was shaken... (Read full poem)
11. Sky Harbor - written by Norman Dubie
Read 641 times on American Poems.
The flock of pigeons rises over the roof,
and just beyond them, the shimmering asphalt fields
gather their dull colored airliners.
It is the very early night,
a young brunette sits before the long
darkening glass of the airport's west... (Read full poem)
12. John Coltrane - written by James A. Emanuel
From Jazz From the Haiku King.
Published in 1999.
Read 1135 times on American Poems.
"Love Supreme," JA-A-Z train,
tops. prompt lightning-express, but
made ALL local stops.
(Read full poem)
13. The Crying Room - written by Lee Upton
Read 540 times on American Poems.
The church had a crying room—
up at the opposite side of the altar.
Good for the baby.
It was glass on all sides like a tank.
A microphone brought in the priest’s voice.
From the crying room we could see
how things happened backstage:
someone... (Read full poem)
14. A High-Toned Old Christian Woman - written by Wallace Stevens
Read 3164 times on American Poems.
Poetry is the supreme fiction, madame.
Take the moral law and make a nave of it
And from the nave build haunted heaven. Thus,
The conscience is converted into palms,
Like windy citherns hankering for hymns.
We agree in principle. That's clear. But... (Read full poem)
15. Sundown - written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
From In the Harbor.
Read 1719 times on American Poems.
The summer sun is sinking low;
Only the tree-tops redden and glow:
Only the weathercock on the spire
Of the neighboring church is a flame of fire;
All is in shadow below.
O beautiful, awful summer day,
What hast thou given, what taken... (Read full poem)
16. The Crescent Moon - written by Amy Lowell
From A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass.
Read 5420 times on American Poems.
Slipping softly through the sky
Little horned, happy moon,
Can you hear me up so high?
Will you come down soon?
On my nursery window-sill
Will you stay your steady flight?
And then float away with me
Through the summer night?
Brushing over... (Read full poem)
17. That Music Always Round Me. - written by Walt Whitman
From Leaves of Grass.
Published in 1900.
Read 4736 times on American Poems.
THAT music always round me, unceasing, unbeginningyet long untaught I did not hear;
But now the chorus I hear, and am elated;
A tenor, strong, ascending, with power and health, with glad notes of day-break I hear,
A soprano, at intervals,... (Read full poem)
18. The Lobster - written by Howard Nemerov
Read 1504 times on American Poems.
Here at the Super Duper, in a glass tank
Supplied by a rill of cold fresh water
Running down a glass washboard at one end
And siphoned off at the other, and so
Perpetually renewed, a herd of lobster
Is made available to the customer
Who may... (Read full poem)
19. Uriel - written by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Read 3156 times on American Poems.
IT fell in the ancient periods
Which the brooding soul surveys,
Or ever the wild Time coin'd itself
Into calendar months and days.
This was the lapse of Uriel,
Which in Paradise befell.
Once, among the Pleiads walking,
Sayd overheard the young gods... (Read full poem)
20. Bird Of Hope - written by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Read 831 times on American Poems.
Soar not too high, O bird of Hope!
Because the skies are fair;
The tempest may come on apace
And overcome thee there.
When far above the mountain tops
Thou soarest, over all –
If, then, the storm should press thee back,
How great would be... (Read full poem)
21. The Valley Of Unrest - written by Edgar Allan Poe
Read 3528 times on American Poems.
Once it smiled a silent dell
Where the people did not dwell;
They had gone unto the wars,
Trusting to the mild-eyed stars,
Nightly, from their azure towers,
To keep watch above the flowers,
In the midst of which all day
The red sunlight... (Read full poem)
22. Lullaby - written by Louise Gluck
From Ararat.
Published in 1990.
Read 2570 times on American Poems.
My mother's an expert in one thing:
sending people she loves into the other world.
The little ones, the babies--these
she rocks, whispering or singing quietly. I can't say
what she did for my father;
whatever it was, I'm sure it was... (Read full poem)
23. My Fathers, The Baltic - written by Philip Levine
Read 637 times on American Poems.
Along the strand stones,
busted shells, wood scraps,
bottle tops, dimpled
and stainless beer cans.
Something began here
a century ago,
a nameless disaster,
perhaps a voyage
to the lost continent
where I was born.
Now the cold winds
of... (Read full poem)
24. This Morning - written by Charles Simic
From A Wedding In Hell.
Published in 1994.
Read 1230 times on American Poems.
Enter without knocking, hard-working ant.
I'm just sitting here mulling over
What to do this dark, overcast day?
It was a night of the radio turned down low,
Fitful sleep, vague, troubling dreams.
I woke up lovesick and confused.
I thought I... (Read full poem)
25. Silver Wind - written by Carl Sandburg
From Smoke and Steel.
Published in 1922.
Read 1582 times on American Poems.
DO you know how the dream looms? how if summer misses one of us the two of us miss summer
Summer when the lungs of the earth take a long breath for the change to low contralto singing mornings when the green corn leaves first break through the... (Read full poem)
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