Love Poems

I Must Accept But Can't What Cannot Be Comments

Reader Comments
great
Name: snow2005-01-11
I think that poem is one of the best that I ever heard!
And I think you should keep writing more love poems!
I'm a poem writer too!Keep it up, And if you've been throuth it I'm sorry for you!cause I've been through it to!
greatest
Name: karimwafa2005-09-24
very nice, very good talent,keep going.
fantastic
Name: gareth2005-10-24
the poem i have just read is great as im going threw the sort of things that you have written in the poem, dont stop writing peoms this is good :)
wonderful
Name: sarah2005-11-10
i love this...it is so great...this is so real..keep writing poems...:)
unhappy
Name: kirskenmaf2010-09-26
unhappy life ...living with a dead...wasting of time...need to set him free...
WOW
Name: Danielle2010-10-06
This is how I feel!
ZPnvLOVjRogXGYyB
Name: Darek2012-12-08
I think part of the problem Judy is that it's an uraeswnnable question. There aren't any black and white dividing lines between prose and poetry as soon as you tried to define the limits, you'd be able to find examples that broke the rule. Thinking about this over breakfast, they both use language, the word (written, or spoken) as the medium, so there are inevitably overspills between one and the other. I'm sure there must be an analogy in art the dividing line between one movement and another.That being said, I suppose (for me) there are certain defining characteristics or qualities of poetry:The language is more compressed each word does more workSentence structure and grammar rules don't need to applyThere's more emphasis on rhythmThere's more emphasis on rhyme, and the sound patterns of words (they might alliterate as much as rhyme, or play on the rhythm)Language is played with in a different way playing with the look, sound and feel of words, with their double and hidden meanings as well as what's on the surfaceYou might see more imagery than you'd expect in prose a closer connection with the language of the dreamworld, and the unconcsious mindBut as I write these, I can see that any of those qualities could be used to describe some prose work.Maybe I'm struggling because I don't find it hard to tell which is which or am happy to accept what is presented to me as a poem, whatever form it comes inI will keep thinking on forms of the answer though
PRNoVDindJ
Name: Salisugambo2012-12-09
Ambiguity is not an American value. We resist the very noiotn that there is anything beyond our practical grasp. If you can make something to sell with it, what good is it? All the arts are essentially useless distractions to most Americans. This is why we offer no avenues to a living for artists but lavish wealth and attention on sports figures and on celebrities whose very existence will be forgotten this time next year. If poets were to make poetry of interest to most Americans it would have to have the fluorescent clarity of an Open sign in a liquor store window: simple, direct, and utterly functional—like a toilet or a Kleenex.
tHFrwllCnCHFOIXr
Name: Della2012-12-10
You know, I can't really firuge out why, it just felt to me like the speaker attempted to tell a friend about Jesus, but instead ended up listening intently to the friends life and learning more from him than anything. It was how it felt to me anyway.
Add a Comment
Your Name
Comment Title
Comment