Free online greeting card maker or poetry art generator. Create free custom printable greeting cards or art from photos and text online. Use PoetrySoup's free online software to make greeting cards from poems, quotes, or your own words. Generate memes, cards, or poetry art for any occasion; weddings, anniversaries, holidays, etc (See examples here). Make a card to show your loved one how special they are to you. Once you make a card, you can email it, download it, or share it with others on your favorite social network site like Facebook. Also, you can create shareable and downloadable cards from poetry on PoetrySoup. Use our poetry search engine to find the perfect poem, and then click the camera icon to create the card or art.
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Enter Poem or Quote (Required)Required Cover the clavicle with the collar, urgent, decisive, a signal of intent. Insufficient means of transformation aren't new. It's the operating room for the untrained, problem to solution with just a thin veil, a change of outward appearance. You're the fixer and the fixed. Blue veins are a trick of the light; blood is red and doesn't wash well. Purple is its inoffensive representative, damage: dressed up and covered over. If I can't talk sensibly about a collar, how can I explore what is beneath it? Scars and debris embedded, hidden, but for tricks of the light. There's a glint within every joy, rather than shrapnel lodged in flesh. It's more I'm lodged in life, a foreign body known about but accepted - not meant to be there, a blight a burden a regret. That no one wants to dig too deep to remove. I'm too near arteries, organs. Long ago, forgotten. Evidence of rendered hardship, but nevermind it. The weight of my soul doesn't tally. Preventing the crossing of borders. So I stay put, don't move on, avoid the discussion, carrying the fragments of harm. Is it safe to carry an unknown risk of explosion - a risk of inflicting irremovable harm to anyone surrounding me? I'm part of it, it's part of me - the forevermore of long gone suffering. Emotional shrapnel. We were all once innocent bystanders - what are we now?
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