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Yes, Peter, I deleted this once because it had errors. I didn't catch 'nto' in time or it would be gone also...

2007-12-06 03:23:33 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Poetry

7 answers

More substantial ones...i guess things and themes that the readers can easily relate to themselves. =)

2007-12-06 03:36:06 · answer #1 · answered by Dark Dickinsonian 4 · 2 0

The cat's call became into Lincoln. It became into important by means of fact Dickinson, left on my own at domicile for a week and a nil.5, ran out of groceries. She could no longer go away and became into compelled to have a typical chinese language cat-lunch. The associates have been sympathetic for her concern, yet now and lower back neglected the leg rub from Lincoln in the morning or maybe awkwardly tried to simulate it. Sylvia Plath asked the board and the....idk am i able to have better credit? Robert Frost became into escorted from the fairgrounds by means of fact he had alzheimer's and theory the porta-potty became into his domicile. The smells have been flawed for manure and particular people who have been stuffing on cotton candy have been flawed for cows. W.C.W. added little ones, so The purple Wheelbarrow is succinct, yet nasty scientific imagery.

2016-10-10 09:45:12 · answer #2 · answered by pickford 4 · 0 0

You're especially adept at iambs. I like them best because iambs imitate the human heartbeat, thereby bringing the reader emotionally into the poem. Explication without emotion is irrelevant.

2007-12-06 03:33:10 · answer #3 · answered by Elaine P...is for Poetry 7 · 2 0

How about some rather simple poems for the retahds in all of us, unless your name happens to be Stooge. He was born with his handicap, but at least he gets all the special parking.

2007-12-06 07:10:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You seem to be way good at all forms...those include the zany to kooky to historical to iambics...all forms that you've written...indeed!

Humor...I'd like to read a poem about the humorous side of a dog...either a pet, or one you notice everyday.

Elysabeth Faslund...Poemhunter.com

2007-12-06 03:49:44 · answer #5 · answered by Elysabeth 7 · 1 0

Anything goes, TD, it's your review.

Of course, cheerful; funny; happy, are always nice, but you have that special knack for making even the horrendous sound good :)

2007-12-06 04:53:23 · answer #6 · answered by Holiday Magic 7 · 1 0

Helpful poetry, please.

I'm trying to learn.

2007-12-06 05:39:13 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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