English | Spanish | French | German | Portuguese| Italian

concrete poetry

mon amour vrai de son oreiller a monté
ce qui conserve
par le rivage, par la mer
trois jours je les ai entendus s'affliger quand je m'étends complètement
elle pourrait l'avoir su en ressort premier
un oiseau a chanté
nos moments plaisants volent
pharaoh, roi de la terre de l'Egypte
beaux, tragical visages
la noblesse de la mort encore
du plancher au plafond
il y a un pays complètement de vin
il est vrai que vous disiez que les dieux sont plus d'utilisation à vous que des fées
quand les mer-vents ont percé nos solitudes

 



Poetry news via Google, MSN, and Yahoo!

  • Spare Times: For Children (New York Times)
  • Obama-Sebelius ‘08 - Canada Free Press
  • Thompson: School's out, but don't forget teachers - Northwest Herald
  • For Your Education - Greenwich Time
  • In a different medium, Lennon tapped into his childlike side - San Diego Union Tribune
  • Nye Beach Writers' Series events focus on whales, author Doug Thompson - Newport News Times
  • Book Briefs - RedOrbit
  • Events set for Holocaust remembrance - Daily Breeze
  • Pupils making net gains with online learning - Ilford Recorder
  • Write 'em, Cowboy - Monterey County Herald
  • A fish story--search leads to questions about public ... - Southside Pride
  • Finding challenge in verse - Stonnington Leader
  • Campus Rights Organizer Remembered for his 'Zest' - Daily Californian
  • Can Game Theory save our at-risk kids? - San Francisco Gate
  • TUF Enough? Tim Credeur blogs about Episode 7 of The Ultimate Fighter - The Daily Advertiser
 

Get better Mortgage Rates today and save!

Get your Online Degrees today!

Poetry | Home | Contact Us | Educational Resources | Vote For This Poem | Visitor Favorites

Summer School Help Beginner Math Physics Primer Chemistry Primer Intro Psychology English Primer
Intro Grammar Beginner Writing American History American Civil War Intro Biology Composition Help


Check out El-Grande Web Directory today!


www.endlesspoetry.com ©Copyright 2004 - 2007 Michael VanDeMar All Rights Reserved