Short On Writing And Wordsmay Poems
Short On Writing And Wordsmay Poems. Below are examples of the most popular short poems about On Writing And Wordsmay by PoetrySoup poets. Search short poems about On Writing And Wordsmay by length and keyword.
Is there no pen in sight
Or tablet to inscribe
How may I then enthrall
Visions to Imbibe
So, I raise my glass
To merry thoughts of Spring
Far beyond the lull of Fall
Sans pen, I may drink
Form:
I'd like to gather my poems
and scatter them
like dewdrops
across acres of land
where they may fasten themselves
to the cool, gray soil
or get tangled
in natures bend
For those
who grab ahold
with thick roots
and impregnable purpose
I'd like to paint them
a golden sun
so they may sprout
into something more fragrant
than just a posy of words
Poetry written with refrains.
Word rhymes may make you go mad.
Lyrical stanzas show beauty.
Quatrains by the duel conception,
Rondeau and roundel combination,
Be true to the form in duty.
Poetry written with refrains
Word rhymes may make you go mad.
Remember its correct direction,
Creating lines not so fruity,
You might make a little booty.
Writing a specific selection,
Poetry written with refrains.
(2005)
Nothing doesn't mean none of thing
I love you
Maybe that's nothing to you but to me, a thing
You hate me
Maybe that's nothing for you but for me, huge thing
The least you still care enough for hating
I may be nothing before you but I am something
I may be nothing for you but you're only one thing
And I'm worth big thing
Compete in Michael J. Falotico's
"A Poem Saying " I'm More Then What you Thought" Contest
By: Dinda Minardi
Inspirational overtures
And unexplainable woes
All I really know for sure
Is I tingle to my toes
I write to see reaction
No matter what some may think
There will be no retraction
Not even if you say I stink
And I see by your reaction
That you may think I’m cracked
I say there’s no retraction
Not even if I get smacked
Some will read and smile
Others will look and frown
I keep writing my own style
Nothing can bring me down
.
As a judge in a poetry contest
elimination,
Look carefully before jumping
into a conclusion.
Printed words may look like black
ants in batallion formation
Or squads of stunned stragglers
crawling out without direction.
Oftentimes they appear as chunks
or slices of random thoughts
Strewn haphazardly on the pages
like burnt wings of moths.
In them you may not see creative
spark or inspiration,
But behind haphazardness may be
imagination!
.