Friday, November 18, 2005

Most Poetic Passages Illuminated

The following beautiful sentences are the excerpts you submitted as the *most poetic* passages in children's literature.

Feel free to add to this list in the comments at any time. I've put a sidebar link to this post.

Still to come - the Most Memorable passages from children's literature.

When you're done here, you can also take a look at the Funniest Passages from children's literature and the Most Memorable Passages from children's literature.

MOST POETIC PASSAGES:

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I love it that as a writer you work with the poetry and music of words. Words are as wild as rocky peaks. They're as smooth as a millpond and as sunny as a day in a meadow. Words are beautiful things. Every word matters.

~The Wand in the Word by Leonard S. Marcus

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.....the simple little words came easily, fitting themselves to the tune that had come out of the harpsichord. It didn't seem to her that she made them up at all. It seemed to her that they flew in from the rose-garden, through the open window, like a lot of butterflies, poised themselves on the point of her pen, and fell off it on to the paper.

~The Little White Horse by Elizabeth Goudge

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The "Avenue," so called by the Newbridge people, was a stretch of road four or five hundred yards long, completely arched over with huge, wide-spreading apple-trees, planted years ago by an eccentric old farmer. Overhead was one long canopy of snowy fragrant bloom. Below the boughs the air was full of a purple twilight and far ahead a glimpse of painted sunset sky shone like a great rose window at the end of a cathedral aisle.

~Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

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It was a beautiful day to grow up.

~Body Bags by Christopher Golden

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She did not produce it easily, but when it came, she had a starving smile.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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After all, the guilt was already there. It was moist. The seed was already bursting into a dark-leafed flower.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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Words and sunlight. That's how she remembered it. The light sparkling on the road and the words like waves, breaking on her back.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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They'd been standing like that for thirty seconds of forever.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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Now it was only noise and girl and wiry woman.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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But maybe supposed to be was what was wrong. Maybe supposed to be was like a child's drawing of a night sky -- stars all aligned, a yellow moon -- simple and pretty and nothing to do with reality.

~Wild Roses by Deb Caletti

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But because our words are clicking into each other to form sentences and our sentences are clicking together to form a dialogue and our dialogue is clicking together to form this scene from this ongoing movie that's as comfortable as it is unrehearsed.

~Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan

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The shuddering little pool of light that traveled just ahead of her had started out pretty dim, and it was fading out like Tinkerbell full of poisoned cake.

~Midnighters: Touching Darkness by Scott Westerfeld

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She might be half-magic, but she was also half glass.

~Where I Want to Be by Adele Griffin

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Dreams grabbed at the corner of my eyes but still wouldn't come fully.

~Mermaid Park by Beth Mayall

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That's the trouble with loving a wild thing. You're always left watching the door.

But you also get kind of used to it.

~East by Edith Pattou

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She was just another person floating down the river of life who had grabbed on to a spar and was hanging on - hanging on because she dared not let go. Like everyone else here, she lacked the strength to swim.

~Poison by Chris Wooding

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She's a body made to move, made for motion. Stillness? No. Never.

~All Rivers Flow to the Sea by Alison McGhee

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. . . But when a house is empty, then it's the house's turn. It holds all the emptiness and all the fullness of the years it has known, the footprints of all the people who have ever walked its rooms gather themselves. The air is expectant, waiting. Hushed. Hush. Listen to the house. What is it telling you?

~All Rivers Flow to the Sea by Alison McGhee

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It was dark outside, and the fireflies twinkled gold against the asphalt. When I was little I'd thought fireflies were fairies. I thought if I caught one and held on to it long enough, it would turn into Tinker Bell and make me fly.

~Anyone But You by Lara M. Zeises

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She was so light, but her emotions were heavy.

~The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan

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Isn't it odd how much fatter a book gets when you've read it several times?...As if something were left between the pages every time you read it. Feelings, thoughts, sounds, smells...and then when you look at the book again many years later, you find yourself there too, a slightly younger self, slightly different, as if the book had preserved you, like a pressed flower... both strange and familiar.

~Inkspell by Cornelia Funke

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The first week of August hangs at the very top of summer, the top of the live-long year, like the highest seat of a ferris wheel when it pauses in its turning. The weeks that come before are only a climb from balmy spring, and those that follow a drop to the chill of autumn, but the first week of August is motionless, and hot. It is curiously silent, too, with blank white dawns and glaring noons, and sunsets smeared with too much color. Often at night there is lightning, but it quivers all alone...

~Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt

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The morning was enough to make anyone feel joyous. The tawny grass was still crisp and sparkling with frost under the pony’s flying feet, and overhead the swelling buds on the trees, just catching the rising sun, were ruby red against a sky of sheeted gold. The air was like wine, warm and yet still laced with the sharp tang of the frost.

~The Little White Horse by Elizabeth Goudge

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“It is raining tonight and it sounds like fairies feet dancing over the garret roof.”

~Emily of New Moon by L. M. Montgomery

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“I shall always think of the wind as a personality. She is a shrew when she blows from the north — a lonely seeker when she blows from the east — a laughing girl when she comes from the west — and tonight from the south a little grey fairy.”

~Emily Climbs by L. M. Montgomery

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The peaks and valleys of the mermaids’ city, which had seemed uniformly aquamarine at a distance, were up close covered in great rolling fields of luminescent blue-green seaweed, but sprinkled and swirled liberally throughout were dots of pink and purple, spirals of yellow and orange, bursts of red, muted brown-orange patches, dribbles of emerald teardrops, and clouds of translucent white pearliness.

~Drift House: The First Voyage by Dale Peck

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The sky was a ragged blaze of red and pink and orange, and its double trembled on the surface of the pond like color spilled from a paintbox. The sun was dropping far now, a soft red sliding egg yolk, and already to the east there was a darkening purple.

~Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt

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Every childhood seems to have such a juvenile in its midst and mists.

~The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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A silent snow fell all night long. It lay like lace along the trees. It hatted the houses. It capsuled the cars in thick and sticky white. A lumbering plow came rumbling, rattling, pushing up hillsides, up mountains, up snow, rolling and rounding it, mounding it high in creamy waves of white.

~This Place in the Snow by Rebecca Bond

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Far, far out to sea, land is only a memory, and empty sky touches water. Just beneath the surface is a tangle of weed and driftwood where tiny creatures cling.

~One Tiny Turtle by Nicola Davies

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A bat is born
Naked and blind and pale.
His mother makes a pocket of her tail
And catches him.
He clings to her long fur
By his thumbs and toes and teeth.
And then the mother dances through the night
Doubling and looping, soaring, somersaulting--
Her baby hangs on underneath...

~The Bat-Poet by Randall Jarrell

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In the dining room, there was so much food. There was a whole fried fish--crispy and brown, meat dumplings fried golden, vegetables shining with oil, steamed buns that looked like puffy clouds, shrimp in a milky sauce, and pork colored a brilliant ruby pink.

~The Year of the Dog by Grace Lin

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Her beady eyes open. Her pixie ears twitch. She shakes her thistledown fur. She unfurls her wings, made of skin so fine the finger bones inside show through.

Now she unhooks her toes and drops into black space. With a sound like a tiny umbrella opening, she flaps her wings.

~Bat Loves the Night by Nicola Davies

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In the chilly morning,
soft fog paints the garden gray.
Pink petals drift from the trees, and leaves dangle, damp with dew.

~Dancers in the Garden by Joanne Ryder

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Gently the warm sun touches the sleeping bird, till he stirs, stretching his wings like a small dark fan and flies into the brightness.

~Dancers in the Garden by Joanne Ryder

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Dancing in the brightness,
hummingbird dips down
where silken webs dangle,
trapping tiny flowers.

~Dancers in the Garden by Joanne Ryder

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That done, they howled at a rising crescent moon that was thin as a fingernail clipping, orange as a pumpkin headed for pie.

~Horns and Wrinkles by Joseph Helgerson

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It was the longest day: mindlessly hot, unspeakably hot, too hot to move or even think. The countryside, the village of Treegap, the wood - all lay defeated. Nothing stirred. The sun was a ponderous circle without edges, a roar without a sound, a blazing glare so thorough and remorseless that even in the Foster’s parlor, with curtains drawn, it seemed an actual presence. You could not shut it out.

~Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt

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He wandered back and forth from Grandma to his father. Penny sat sunken quiet in a padded chair in the front room. Shadows lay over him and absorbed him. There was not here the excitement of a visit to the Forresters. There was instead a snugness that covered him like a warm quilt in winter.

~The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

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Slowly dusk pours the syrup of darkness into the forest.

~Twilight Comes Twice by Ralph Fletcher

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With invisible arms dawn erases the stars fom the blackboard of night.

~Twilight Comes Twice by Ralph Fletcher

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It's early morning at the seashore and it's hard to tell where the sea stops and the sky begins.

They are the same smoky gray until the mist shifts from gray to dark white, from dark white to pale purple, from pale purple to hazy blue, and then suddenly, the sun breaks through!

~The Seashore Book by Charlotte Zolotow

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The sun climbs high into the blue sky. By mid-morning a thousand tiny streams run from the roof like a curtain of crystal beads.

~Spring Thaw by Steven Schnur

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In the beginning, there was nothing but darkness and water that lay cold and still as black marble. Nothing moved in the inky silence.

~The Star Bearer: A Creation Myth from Ancient Egypt by Dianne Hofmeyr

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And when the cool autumn winds would come puff-puffing through the clouds, and the hold-on-tight leaves would finally let go and float-flutter to the ground, out we'd go into the eye-blinking blue air, with Mama leading in a leaf-kicking

leg-lifting

hand-clapping

hello autumn ballet.

~My Mama had a Dancing Heart by Libba Gray

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The last drops of the thundershower had hardly ceased falling when the Pedestrian stuffed his map into his pocket, settled his pack more comfortably on his tired shoulders, and stepped out from the shelter of a large chestnut-tree into the middle of the road. A violent yellow sunset was pouring through a rift in the clouds to westward, but straight ahead over the hills the sky was the colour of dark slate. Every tree and blade of grass was dripping, and the road shone like a river . . .

~Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis

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This was how we'd always played.
You were Cinderella, I was a mouse.
You were Alice, I was the Hatter.
You were the sun, and I wasn't even the moon.

~The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan

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You think you know your possibilities.
Then other people come into your life.
And suddenly there are so many more.

~The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan

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The girl let the braid drop back with a sigh that seemed to come from her very toes and to exhale forth all the sorrows of the ages.

"Yes, it's red," she said resignedly. "Now you see why I can't be perfectly happy. Nobody could who has red hair. I don't mind the other things so much--the freckles and the green eyes and my skinniness. I can imagine them away. I can imagine that I have a beautiful rose-leaf complexion and lovely starry violet eyes. But I CANNOT imagine that red hair away. I do my best. I think to myself, `Now my hair is a glorious black, black as the raven's wing.' But all the time I KNOW it is just plain red and it breaks my heart. It will be my lifelong sorrow. I read of a girl once in a novel who had a lifelong sorrow but it wasn't red hair.Her hair was pure gold rippling back from her alabaster brow. What is an alabaster brow? I never could find out. Can you tell me?"

~Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

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There was a freshness in the airas of a wind that had blown over honey-sweet fields of clover. Home lights twinkled out here and there among the homestead trees. Beyond lay the sea, misty and purple, with its haunting, unceasing murmur. The west was a glory of soft mingled hues, and the pond reflected them all in still softer shadings. The beauty of it all thrilled Anne's heart, and she gratefully opened the gates of her soul to it.

~Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

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" . . . a sweet, wicked smile, full of mischief and hope."

~Enthusiasm by Polly Shulman

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In the end, I'm just a girl on a sleeping bag in the middle of nowhere, at the starting line of every mistake she'll ever make.

~The Geography of Girlhood by Kirsten Smith

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Tucked under its gnarled roots, small creatures found safety from the fox and owl. Slowly, slowly, over the years the forest soil increased as the brown, leathery leaves, shaken down by autumn winds, moldered under the snow.

~The Gift of the Tree by Alvin Tresselt

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On the trunk where the tree lay half buried in the damp and musty leaf loam, the mosses stitched a green carpet, softer than the softest wool. Fragile ferns nestled in its shadow, mushrooms popped out of the decaying mold, and clumps of creamy white Indian pipes clustered together, drawing nourishment from the rich loam.

~The Gift of the Tree by Alvin Tresselt

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I arrived when Rebecca's life was more than half over, and my share of what she leaves behind is therefore small. Just big enough to carry.

~Stay With Me by Garret Freymann-Weyr

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We will not just do everything wrong. We will need entirely new verbs.

~Stay With Me by Garret Freymann-Weyr

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When the sun hides behind dark rooftops, you can step outside and see the night begin.

All around you, grayness is creeping,
darkening the wood fence,
darkening the green bushes, darkening the tall roosting tree.

~Step Into the Night by Joanne Ryder

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A chunk of moon shines above the treetops. One tiny light peeks through the evening sky and flickers brightly far, far away.

~Step Into the Night by Joanne Ryder

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Clouds capture the chunk of moon, but it escapes for a moment. The moonlight reveals a patch of lace across an empty space. You move closer and watch a fat body with so many legs climbing in circles around and around a pale silken web.

~Step Into the Night by Joanne Ryder

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White petals float down like late spring snow on a thick green carpet. Someone new peeks out from a dark tunnel into the sun. A young woodchuck with tiny bright eyes watches new things--shadows flickering; petals drifting down, you, passing by.

~Under Your Feet by Joanne Ryder

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Like chilly mornings, fall apples taste sharp and cool. Your fingers slide around the smooth bright ball. Your tongue tingles with the juicy taste of fall.

~Under Your Feet by Joanne Ryder

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One gray day you can hear autumn honking across the sky. You see winter rising from chimneys in dark gray puffs. Now the world seems quiet, everyone seems far away but you.

~Under Your Feet by Joanne Ryder

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2 comments:

Elaine Magliaro said...

Great contest, Nancy. I enjoyed skimming through my children's books to find poetic passages.
Got my prize in the mail yestreday.
I just have to make sure my daughter doesn't take it. She's a Starbucks kind of girl!

Viagra said...

Well, this only made me feel like I really need to read "The Book Thief"! I think I never read a book for children... Well, just a few ones from other countries, because my father was a collector of strange foreign books.
But in my own language and country... any single one.