Basketball Epic Poems | Examples
These Basketball Epic poems are examples of Epic poems about Basketball. These are the best examples of Epic Basketball poems written by international poets.
Tell me the color of my tears
tell me if you will what is the color of my tears
are they the color white or red
I can’t bare to look and see
There must be something wrong with me
I’ve never done this crying thing before
my wife was the center of my life
she took away everything I had
my love my two children my life
and she won’t give them back to me
so I took the spade
and dug the hole where she’s now laid
in the darkest corner of my mind where the wind blows cold
and it always rains the sun will never shine
in the darkest corner of my mind
I feel the tears falling from my eyes like an April rain
does my crying bring me shame I cannot bare the pain
tell me please what is the color of my tears
I’ve never done this drying thing before
Dennis Davis 10/28/17
All pay-per-view events are very expensive, even on a monthly budget. These pay-per-view
events include boxing, football, basketball, soccer, and wrestling (WWE Capitol
Punishment, e.g.) All pay-per-view events have been on TV since cable was invented. But it
seems to me that all of the cable customers can barely afford to watch one pay-per-view
event, let alone 11 or 12. I think that all pay-per-view events are like $40 to $60 a
piece. It also seems that since all cable consumers can't afford a pay-per-view event on
TV, then they should get it on DVD. And if these pay-per-view events continue to bleed all
of the cable customers dry, they'll be broke by then.
Knoxville, Tennessee, is where I was born 23 years ago. The city is home to the Volunteers
of the University of Tennessee. Knoxville has almost everything any tourist like: there's
shops, theaters, including the infamous Tennessee Theater, and the Women's Basketball Hall
of Fame. The city of Knoxville has a lot of restaurant, too. This building has a giant
ball on top of it. What's so great about Knoxville, Tennessee, is that everyone can see
plenty of monuments, including the Craighead-Jackson House, James White's house, and the
infamous Gay Street. No wonder Knoxville is also the biggest city in the state of
Tennessee. It's been 23 years since I was born there. I'm looking forward to going to my
birth town; where it all began. If I were to go back to Knoxville, Tennessee, the place
where I was born in, then it'll be like a welcome-back vacation.