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Best Famous Vomiting Poems

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

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Written by John Donne | Create an image from this poem

Elegy I: Jealousy

 Fond woman, which wouldst have thy husband die,
And yet complain'st of his great jealousy;
If swol'n with poison, he lay in his last bed,
His body with a sere-bark covered,
Drawing his breath, as thick and short, as can
The nimblest crocheting musician,
Ready with loathsome vomiting to spew
His soul out of one hell, into a new,
Made deaf with his poor kindred's howling cries,
Begging with few feigned tears, great legacies,
Thou wouldst not weep, but jolly and frolic be,
As a slave, which tomorrow should be free;
Yet weep'st thou, when thou seest him hungerly
Swallow his own death, hearts-bane jealousy.
O give him many thanks, he's courteous, That in suspecting kindly warneth us Wee must not, as we used, flout openly, In scoffing riddles, his deformity; Nor at his board together being sat, With words, nor touch, scarce looks adulterate; Nor when he swol'n, and pampered with great fare Sits down, and snorts, caged in his basket chair, Must we usurp his own bed any more, Nor kiss and play in his house, as before.
Now I see many dangers; for that is His realm, his castle, and his diocese.
But if, as envious men, which would revile Their Prince, or coin his gold, themselves exile Into another country, and do it there, We play in another house, what should we fear? There we will scorn his houshold policies, His seely plots, and pensionary spies, As the inhabitants of Thames' right side Do London's Mayor; or Germans, the Pope's pride.


Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

August 17th

 Good for visiting hospitals or charitable work.
Take some time to attend to your health.
Surely I will be disquieted by the hospital, that body zone-- bodies wrapped in elastic bands, bodies cased in wood or used like telephones, bodies crucified up onto their crutches, bodies wearing rubber bags between their legs, bodies vomiting up their juice like detergent, Here in this house there are other bodies.
Whenever I see a six-year-old swimming in our aqua pool a voice inside me says what can't be told.
.
.
Ha, someday you'll be old and withered and tubes will be in your nose drinking up your dinner.
Someday you'll go backward.
You'll close up like a shoebox and you'll be cursed as you push into death feet first.
Here in the hospital, I say, that is not my body, not my body.
I am not here for the doctors to read like a recipe.
No.
I am a daisy girl blowing in the wind like a piece of sun.
On ward 7 there are daisies, all butter and pearl but beside a blind man who can only eat up the petals and count to ten.
The nurses skip rope around him and shiver as his eyes wiggle like mercury and then they dance from patient to patient to patient throwing up little paper medicine cups and playing catch with vials of dope as they wait for new accidents.
Bodies made of synthetics.
Bodies swaddled like dolls whom I visit and cajole and all they do is hum like computers doing up our taxes, dollar by dollar.
Each body is in its bunker.
The surgeon applies his gum.
Each body is fitted quickly into its ice-cream pack and then stitched up again for the long voyage back.
Written by William Blake | Create an image from this poem

I Saw a Chapel

 I saw a chapel all of gold 
That none did dare to enter in,
And many weeping stood without,
Weeping, mourning, worshipping.
I saw a serpent rise between The white pillars of the door, And he forc'd and forc'd and forc'd, Down the golden hinges tore.
And along the pavement sweet, Set with pearls and rubies bright, All his slimy length he drew Till upon the altar white Vomiting his poison out On the bread and on the wine.
So I turn'd into a sty And laid me down among the swine.
Written by Federico García Lorca | Create an image from this poem

Landscape of a Vomiting Multitude

 The fat lady came out first,
tearing out roots and moistening drumskins.
The fat lady who turns dying octopuses inside out.
The fat lady, the moon's antagonist, was running through the streets and deserted buildings and leaving tiny skulls of pigeons in the corners and stirring up the furies of the last centuries' feasts and summoning the demon of bread through the sky's clean-swept hills and filtering a longing for light into subterranean tunnels.
The graveyards, yes the graveyards and the sorrow of the kitchens buried in sand, the dead, pheasants and apples of another era, pushing it into our throat.
There were murmuring from the jungle of vomit with the empty women, with hot wax children, with fermented trees and tireless waiters who serve platters of salt beneath harps of saliva.
There's no other way, my son, vomit! There's no other way.
It's not the vomit of hussars on the breasts of their whores, nor the vomit of cats that inadvertently swallowed frogs, but the dead who scratch with clay hands on flint gates where clouds and desserts decay.
The fat lady came first with the crowds from the ships, taverns, and parks.
Vomit was delicately shaking its drums among a few little girls of blood who were begging the moon for protection.
Who could imagine my sadness? The look on my face was mine, but now isn't me, the naked look on my face, trembling for alcohol and launching incredible ships through the anemones of the piers.
I protect myself with this look that flows from waves where no dawn would go, I, poet without arms, lost in the vomiting multitude, with no effusive horse to shear the thick moss from my temples.
The fat lady went first and the crowds kept looking for pharmacies where the bitter tropics could be found.
Only when a flag went up and the first dogs arrived did the entire city rush to the railings of the boardwalk.
Written by Frank O'Hara | Create an image from this poem

Spleen

I know so much
about things I accept
so much it's like
vomiting.
And I am nourished by the shabbiness of my knowing so much about others and what they do and accepting so much that I hate as if I didn't know what it is to me.
And what it is to them I know and hate.


Written by William Carlos (WCW) Williams | Create an image from this poem

Complaint

 They call me and I go.
It is a frozen road past midnight, a dust of snow caught in the rigid wheeltracks.
The door opens.
I smile, enter and shake off the cold.
Here is a great woman on her side in the bed.
She is sick, perhaps vomiting, perhaps laboring to give birth to a tenth child.
Joy! Joy! Night is a room darkened for lovers, through the jalousies the sun has sent one golden needle! I pick the hair from her eyes and watch her misery with compassion.
Written by Russell Edson | Create an image from this poem

Vomit

 The house grows sick in its dining room and begins to vomit.
Father cries, the dining room is vomiting.
No wonder, the way you eat, it's enough to make anybody sick, says his wife.
What shall we do? What shall we do? he cries.
Call the Vomit Doctor of course.
Yes, but all he does is vomit, sighs father.
If you were a vomit doctor you'd vomit too.
But isn't there enough vomit? sighs father.
There is never enough vomit.
Do I make everybody that sick, sighs father.
No no, everybody is born sick.
Born sick? cries father.
Of course, haven't you noticed how everybody eventually dies? she says.
Is the dining room dying .
.
.
? .
.
.
The way you eat, it's enough to make anyone sick, she screams.
So I do make everybody that sick .
.
.
Excuse me, I think I'm going to be sick, she says.
Oh where is the Vomit Doctor? At least when he vomits one knows one has it from high authority, screamed father.