Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
"awarded" poems
1737 Rearrange a “Wife’s” affection! When they dislocate my Brain! Amputate my freckled ***** Make me bearded like a man! Blush, my spirit, in thy Fastness— Blush, my unacknowledged clay— Seven years of troth have taught thee More than Wifehood every may! Love that never leaped its socket— Trust entrenched in narrow pain— Constancy thro’ fire—awarded— Anguish—bare of anodyne! Burden—borne so far triumphant— None suspect me of the crown, For I wear the “Thorns” till Sunset— Then—my Diadem put on. Big my Secret but it’s bandaged— It will never get away Till the Day its Weary Keeper Leads it through the Grave to thee.
0
8.2k
Rearrange a “Wife’s” affection!
Mirror, mirror on the wall, Who is the fairest of us all? Skin so delicate and fair Blue eyes and long black hair A good king, a good daughter A wicked stepmother One day full of gloom and dread When The Wicked heard it said "The Daughter is the fairest, O' dear! You are second best!" The Wicked was wild with jelousy And begun plotting conspiracy Getting rid of the fair lady Was the wicked plan of the day The Wicked called on her servant The name was **** Cindy Bribed her with riches women want Promised her a gift of beauty So **** Cindy and The Daughter Went into the depth of the forest **** Cindy has led the pretty girl She surely must put her to death! Our **** Cindy however Found the girl a thing of beauty **** Cindy's courage betrayed her Excused herself and ran away The pretty daughter was left alone Terribly scared but still alive Tears fell as she thought of home Doubtful if she will ever survive **** Cindy returned to the castle Showing a heart of a roe deer And served as a loyal vassal To The Ever Wicked stepmother So **** Cindy got rewarded With unimaginable riches Lasting beauty she was awarded At last she got her wishes At night our **** Cindy Her riches, all she gathered And then she vanished swiftly Away from The Ever Wicked Meanwhile the pretty daughter Found a place to stay That house was full of laughter And the rest was history Highly pleased now The Wicked Turned again to the mirror But her hopes became unsettled After the unpleasant cheer She must die! She must die! Went The Wicked's awful cry She became an old peasant Killed the girl with a poison And so the pretty daughter Laid in the forest for days The cute house lost its laughter The Wicked went on her ways The sad news reached the town And to our **** Cindy So she wore her sexiest gown And started on her journey Into the forest she went Looking for that pretty girl Her heart skipped and bent Feeling that awesome thrill **** Cindy found The Daughter Lying on a wooden bed "Thy beauty is oh, so rare!" Was the thought inside her head She could not help but wet her lips Staring at the sleeping lady She felt a tingle below her hips And sensation inside her belly They said no man can wake the girl And maybe no man really can? So **** Cindy kissed The Daughter And so her passion has began The kiss was oddly very awesome And it stirred the sleeping girl It brought a funny slurpy sound Waking up The Royal Daughter "Oh God! Oh my! Oh my! Oh my beautiful princess! Take my hand, come with me Away from this very place!" So **** Cindy and The Daughter They ran away together Across the land of nowhere Where they lived happily ever after Mirror, mirror on the wall, Who is the fairest of us all? "Snow and Cindy are the fairest O' dear! Now you're the third best!" ~THE END~
0
Jan 11, 2013
Jan 11, 2013 at 12:51 AM UTC
Mutable
Mirror, mirror on the wall, Who is the fairest of us all? Skin so delicate and fair Blue eyes and long black hair A good king, a good daughter A wicked stepmother One day full of gloom and dread When The Wicked heard it said "The Daughter is the fairest, O' dear! You are second best!" The Wicked was wild with jelousy And begun plotting conspiracy Getting rid of the fair lady Was the wicked plan of the day The Wicked called on her servant The name was **** Cindy Bribed her with riches women want Promised her a gift of beauty So **** Cindy and The Daughter Went into the depth of the forest **** Cindy has led the pretty girl She surely must put her to death! Our **** Cindy however Found the girl a thing of beauty **** Cindy's courage betrayed her Excused herself and ran away The pretty daughter was left alone Terribly scared but still alive Tears fell as she thought of home Doubtful if she will ever survive **** Cindy returned to the castle Showing a heart of a roe deer And served as a loyal vassal To The Ever Wicked stepmother So **** Cindy got rewarded With unimaginable riches Lasting beauty she was awarded At last she got her wishes At night our **** Cindy Her riches, all she gathered And then she vanished swiftly Away from The Ever Wicked Meanwhile the pretty daughter Found a place to stay That house was full of laughter And the rest was history Highly pleased now The Wicked Turned again to the mirror But her hopes became unsettled After the unpleasant cheer She must die! She must die! Went The Wicked's awful cry She became an old peasant Killed the girl with a poison And so the pretty daughter Laid in the forest for days The cute house lost its laughter The Wicked went on her ways The sad news reached the town And to our **** Cindy So she wore her sexiest gown And started on her journey Into the forest she went Looking for that pretty girl Her heart skipped and bent Feeling that awesome thrill **** Cindy found The Daughter Lying on a wooden bed "Thy beauty is oh, so rare!" Was the thought inside her head She could not help but wet her lips Staring at the sleeping lady She felt a tingle below her hips And sensation inside her belly They said no man can wake the girl And maybe no man really can? So **** Cindy kissed The Daughter And so her passion has began The kiss was oddly very awesome And it stirred the sleeping girl It brought a funny slurpy sound Waking up The Royal Daughter "Oh God! Oh my! Oh my! Oh my beautiful princess! Take my hand, come with me Away from this very place!" So **** Cindy and The Daughter They ran away together Across the land of nowhere Where they lived happily ever after Mirror, mirror on the wall, Who is the fairest of us all? "Snow and Cindy are the fairest O' dear! Now you're the third best!" ~THE END~
Continue reading...
95
My First Day at Hogwarts On a Saturday morning, I woke up in pain. Perched on top of my head, Was an owl shaking its mane. As I focused my glance, the owl got clearer. There was something clutched in its beak; a pale yellow letter. When I opened it, words started to bloom, Mr Y. Vartak, The inner bedroom. ‘You have a place in Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Points will be taken for wrong, and awarded for bravery.’ I showed it to my parents, Who were not at all surprised. They were in fact very happy, I am a wizard I realized! We took a plane to London, Visit Diagon Alley. In a hurry to buy my first wand, robes and stationery. It was the first of September, so we hurried to Kings Cross. We got to platform nine and three quarters, after struggling through the chaos. I had everything in my trunk, I had nothing more to get. My parents surprised me, by giving me an owl as a pet. I got a seat in the Hogwarts Express, and put my robes, There was a boy opposite me, he was juggling bewitched globes. We got off the train, At Hogsmeade Station. There was an amazing castle, that was beyond my imagination. We rowed across the lake, sitting on boats, It was getting colder, so we pulled on our coats We entered the hall, Full of eyes. There was a roof above us, that represented the vast skies. There was a dusty hat, in the middle of a stage, It had a rip near the brim, so it looked older than its age. A professor named Minerva, Put that hat on my head. The rip opened like a mouth, Interesting is what it said. The Sorting Hat as it was called, said that he had to think some more, After a while it yelled: ‘He’ll go in GRYFFINDOR!’ I joined the Gryffindor, at the Start-Of-Term Feast. We were so involved I talking, we cared for our sleep the least. After the feast, we departed, for Gryffindor Common Room, Outside the portrait hole, there was, a shiny black broom. I changed from my robes to my nightdress, lay down watching the dying ember. My eyelids were getting heavy, I walked into a deep slumber. This poem is written by me, Yash Singh. Specially written for my favourite, Joanne Kathleen Rowling.
0
Sep 8, 2019
Sep 8, 2019 at 7:20 AM UTC
My First Day at Hogwarts
My First Day at Hogwarts On a Saturday morning, I woke up in pain. Perched on top of my head, Was an owl shaking its mane. As I focused my glance, the owl got clearer. There was something clutched in its beak; a pale yellow letter. When I opened it, words started to bloom, Mr Y. Vartak, The inner bedroom. ‘You have a place in Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Points will be taken for wrong, and awarded for bravery.’ I showed it to my parents, Who were not at all surprised. They were in fact very happy, I am a wizard I realized! We took a plane to London, Visit Diagon Alley. In a hurry to buy my first wand, robes and stationery. It was the first of September, so we hurried to Kings Cross. We got to platform nine and three quarters, after struggling through the chaos. I had everything in my trunk, I had nothing more to get. My parents surprised me, by giving me an owl as a pet. I got a seat in the Hogwarts Express, and put my robes, There was a boy opposite me, he was juggling bewitched globes. We got off the train, At Hogsmeade Station. There was an amazing castle, that was beyond my imagination. We rowed across the lake, sitting on boats, It was getting colder, so we pulled on our coats We entered the hall, Full of eyes. There was a roof above us, that represented the vast skies. There was a dusty hat, in the middle of a stage, It had a rip near the brim, so it looked older than its age. A professor named Minerva, Put that hat on my head. The rip opened like a mouth, Interesting is what it said. The Sorting Hat as it was called, said that he had to think some more, After a while it yelled: ‘He’ll go in GRYFFINDOR!’ I joined the Gryffindor, at the Start-Of-Term Feast. We were so involved I talking, we cared for our sleep the least. After the feast, we departed, for Gryffindor Common Room, Outside the portrait hole, there was, a shiny black broom. I changed from my robes to my nightdress, lay down watching the dying ember. My eyelids were getting heavy, I walked into a deep slumber. This poem is written by me, Yash Singh. Specially written for my favourite, Joanne Kathleen Rowling.
Continue reading...
77
The ****** of the east and west, At Your recovery we all rest, Lord is merciful but the people are not. Clocks tick and the days goes by, I'm afraid that you will never be forgotten. The west will dangle you Before the eyes of thousands. For all the thousand things they want Your agendas are quite right I'm afraid, Perhaps they thought metal was the answer. They were afraid as well. Showed, praised and written about, Cherished and awarded. Our dear malala. I can't help think, Perhaps you're a puppet And west the clever puppeteers. Brave as you are, I know for sure now that You don't stand a chance. Life might be short but it seems like an eternity. For change is what you want, You don't reside with the enemy, You don't accept their awards. When a government can't assure us change, What chance do you stand with your words, For you are just a girl with a bullet hole. And half this country is drowned in illiteracy. Brace yourself sweetheart, Cause you are just another girl, Where millions others are fighting a real fight, All you do is befriend the woeful west.
0
Dec 18, 2014
Dec 18, 2014 at 10:30 AM UTC
Malala
This Distant Light by Walid Khazindar loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Bitterly cold, winter clings to the naked trees. If only you would free the bright sparrows from your fingertips and release a smile―that shy, tentative smile― from the imprisoned anguish I see. Sing! Can we not sing as if we were warm, hand-in-hand, sheltered by shade from a sweltering sun? Can you not always remain this way, stoking the fire: more beautiful than expected, in reverie? Darkness increases and we must remain vigilant since this distant light is our sole consolation ... this imperiled flame, which from the beginning has constantly flickered, in danger of going out. Come to me, closer and closer. I don't want to be able to tell my hand from yours. And let's stay awake, lest the snow smother us. Walid Khazindar was born in Gaza City. He is considered to be one of the very best Palestinian poets; his poetry has been said to be "characterized by metaphoric originality and a novel thematic approach unprecedented in Arabic poetry." He was awarded the first Palestine Prize for Poetry in 1997. Keywords/Tags: Arabic, translation, Arab, Palestine, Palestinian, Gaza, distant, light, flame, fire, autumn, winter, trees, birds, sparrows, fingertips, smile, sing, shade, sun, fire, darkness, hand, hands, snow
0
May 29, 2020
May 29, 2020 at 4:24 AM UTC
Walid Khazindar "Distant Light" translation
The Annual POCU Fashion Show held by the campus organization “People of Color United,” was held in the Student Activities Center on Saturday, April 18. The fashion show is the final activity of the year held by POCU. Junior Martell Prayear and senior Miranda Jackson were the show’s hosts and announcers. The fashion show is a competition where various designers, or teams of designers, are required to create outfits that adhere to a general theme, but also incorporate the designer’s unique, personal concepts. This year, the general theme for the fashion show was: Thrift Shop. Each designer, or group of designers, was required to utilize clothes purchased from the local Goodwill and maintain a $50 budget. Preparations for the event, Jackson said, were very short. “I was really surprised how well it turned out, because we started practicing for the show at four o’clock that day,” Jackson said. “They typically start practicing way a head of time.” Despite the delayed preparation, the fashion show was an overall success. The first designer to present at the fashion show was Victoria Webster. Webster’s fashion line was inspired by professional work attire. “I think it can be hard transitioning college wear into professional wear, on a budget,” Webster said of her outfits. Webster was able to find three models to wear the clothes, which she said was a combination of the model’s personal items, as well as those purchased through Goodwill. The second fashion line presented at the fashion show was designed by Iyana Lynch. For her personal theme, Lynch designed outfits that were inspired by the different seasons. The third designer to present that evening was Alyssa Nieset. Inspired by 90’s menswear, Nieset designed a line of androgynous outfits. The final clothing line presented was a team effort from: Jeanita Blue and Angel Powell. Their theme was considered “90’s Reloaded,” and featured various throwbacks to 1990’s pop culture such as TLC and The Spice Girls. Blue said that most of the outfits in their fashion line were inspired by “eco-friendly fashion,” and were intended to decrease hesitation toward shopping at thrift stores. While the judges finalized the scores for each designer or team, the Urban Dance Association entertained the crowd with a quick performance. The judge’s scores resulted in a tie between Jeanita Blue & Angel Powell, and Iyana Lynch. Despite the general tie, Blue and Powell were awarded first place, while Lynch was granted second place. There was an off-campus reception held in Cleveland after the event. Read more here:www.marieaustralia.com/purple-formal-dresses | www.marieaustralia.com/green-formal-dresses
0
May 4, 2015
May 4, 2015 at 10:36 PM UTC
POCU Fashion Show Inspires BW to “Get Thrifty”
The Annual POCU Fashion Show held by the campus organization “People of Color United,” was held in the Student Activities Center on Saturday, April 18. The fashion show is the final activity of the year held by POCU. Junior Martell Prayear and senior Miranda Jackson were the show’s hosts and announcers. The fashion show is a competition where various designers, or teams of designers, are required to create outfits that adhere to a general theme, but also incorporate the designer’s unique, personal concepts. This year, the general theme for the fashion show was: Thrift Shop. Each designer, or group of designers, was required to utilize clothes purchased from the local Goodwill and maintain a $50 budget. Preparations for the event, Jackson said, were very short. “I was really surprised how well it turned out, because we started practicing for the show at four o’clock that day,” Jackson said. “They typically start practicing way a head of time.” Despite the delayed preparation, the fashion show was an overall success. The first designer to present at the fashion show was Victoria Webster. Webster’s fashion line was inspired by professional work attire. “I think it can be hard transitioning college wear into professional wear, on a budget,” Webster said of her outfits. Webster was able to find three models to wear the clothes, which she said was a combination of the model’s personal items, as well as those purchased through Goodwill. The second fashion line presented at the fashion show was designed by Iyana Lynch. For her personal theme, Lynch designed outfits that were inspired by the different seasons. The third designer to present that evening was Alyssa Nieset. Inspired by 90’s menswear, Nieset designed a line of androgynous outfits. The final clothing line presented was a team effort from: Jeanita Blue and Angel Powell. Their theme was considered “90’s Reloaded,” and featured various throwbacks to 1990’s pop culture such as TLC and The Spice Girls. Blue said that most of the outfits in their fashion line were inspired by “eco-friendly fashion,” and were intended to decrease hesitation toward shopping at thrift stores. While the judges finalized the scores for each designer or team, the Urban Dance Association entertained the crowd with a quick performance. The judge’s scores resulted in a tie between Jeanita Blue & Angel Powell, and Iyana Lynch. Despite the general tie, Blue and Powell were awarded first place, while Lynch was granted second place. There was an off-campus reception held in Cleveland after the event. Read more here:www.marieaustralia.com/purple-formal-dresses | www.marieaustralia.com/green-formal-dresses
Continue reading...
4
Georgiana Seymour,             Duchess of Somerset crowned _'Queen of Beauty'_ at the 1839 Eglinton Tournament,    the first known                         beauty pageant; W European festivals dating to the medieval era provide the most direct lineage for beauty pageants. For example, English May Day celebrations always involved the selection of a May Queen. In the United States, the May Day tradition of selecting a woman to serve as a symbol of bounty and community ideals continued, as young beautiful women participated in public celebrations; such as the beauty pageant held during the Eglinton Tournament of 1839, organized by Archibald Montgomerie,           13th Earl of Eglinton, as part of a re-enactment of a medieval joust that was held in Scotland;                                the pageant was won by Georgiana Seymour,                                   Duchess of Somerset, wife of Edward Seymour,                             12th Duke of Somerset, and sister of Caroline Norton;                 Georgiana proclaimed _"Queen of Beauty"_; Entrepreneur Phineas Taylor Barnum staged the first modern American pageant in 1854,           his beauty contest closed down after public protest; However beauty contests became popular in the 1880s;     In 1888 the title of _'beauty queen'_ was awarded to an 18-year-old Creole contestant at a pageant in Spa, Belgium. All participants had to supply a photograph & a short description of themselves to be eligible to enter; a final selection of 21 judged by a formal panel. Such events were not regarded as respectable; But beauty contests came to be considered more respectable with the first modern _"Miss America"_            contest held in 1921; Still the oldest pageant in operation,   the Miss America pageant was organized in 1921 by a local businessman as a means to entice tourists to Atlantic City, New Jersey; The pageant hosted the winners of local             newspaper beauty contests in the _Inter-City Beauty Contest_ & was attended     by over one hundred thousand people; _Sixteen-year-old Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C. was crowned Miss America 1921, having won both the popularity and beauty contests, and was awarded $100_
0
Sep 1, 2018
Sep 1, 2018 at 10:04 AM UTC
Queens of Beauty
Georgiana Seymour,             Duchess of Somerset crowned _'Queen of Beauty'_ at the 1839 Eglinton Tournament,    the first known                         beauty pageant; W European festivals dating to the medieval era provide the most direct lineage for beauty pageants. For example, English May Day celebrations always involved the selection of a May Queen. In the United States, the May Day tradition of selecting a woman to serve as a symbol of bounty and community ideals continued, as young beautiful women participated in public celebrations; such as the beauty pageant held during the Eglinton Tournament of 1839, organized by Archibald Montgomerie,           13th Earl of Eglinton, as part of a re-enactment of a medieval joust that was held in Scotland;                                the pageant was won by Georgiana Seymour,                                   Duchess of Somerset, wife of Edward Seymour,                             12th Duke of Somerset, and sister of Caroline Norton;                 Georgiana proclaimed _"Queen of Beauty"_; Entrepreneur Phineas Taylor Barnum staged the first modern American pageant in 1854,           his beauty contest closed down after public protest; However beauty contests became popular in the 1880s;     In 1888 the title of _'beauty queen'_ was awarded to an 18-year-old Creole contestant at a pageant in Spa, Belgium. All participants had to supply a photograph & a short description of themselves to be eligible to enter; a final selection of 21 judged by a formal panel. Such events were not regarded as respectable; But beauty contests came to be considered more respectable with the first modern _"Miss America"_            contest held in 1921; Still the oldest pageant in operation,   the Miss America pageant was organized in 1921 by a local businessman as a means to entice tourists to Atlantic City, New Jersey; The pageant hosted the winners of local             newspaper beauty contests in the _Inter-City Beauty Contest_ & was attended     by over one hundred thousand people; _Sixteen-year-old Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C. was crowned Miss America 1921, having won both the popularity and beauty contests, and was awarded $100_
Continue reading...
49
*As a kid when I heard the stories Of heavens and hells And gods and ghosts I thought of those to be true But as I grew My education warned me Not to trust that view As a child when my elders advised Do unto others as you would have them do to you I thought they were impractical Ignorant of smartness required To manage things through By far I thought I was the wise To have known it all Realized late in time How great was that fall Superficial logic, intellectual materialism Cloaked my natural state of true mind Boosting desires, sterile opinions Leaving the true sense behind I am thankful to the nature For giving me an opportune To study the greatest reality Why humans are marooned Time and space are eternal I am just the part of that infinite The one awarded with human form For some past intentions right I should not take pride in that For where I am today Later might be someone else’s part Man who decoded the mystery of mind Taught this decades ago Guard thoughts, actions, and speech To reach the real goal Not judge anything and any being Instead focus on developing clear seeing As everything is ever changing Including ones birth realms A full mind just exhibits knowledge Only in empty mind wisdom reaps Don’t get swayed by extremes Middle way is the path of keep Now I understand Message behind the moral stories What one sows is what one reaps One gets heavenly pleasures or hellish pain Exclusively based on law of deeds One gets what one deserves For law of nature never fails But latent power within Can turn it all around If not enlightenment One can at least find in life A decent ground Now and in future!*
0
Mar 5, 2016
Mar 5, 2016 at 1:18 AM UTC
Power of Mind-A Tiny Buddha Within All
*As a kid when I heard the stories Of heavens and hells And gods and ghosts I thought of those to be true But as I grew My education warned me Not to trust that view As a child when my elders advised Do unto others as you would have them do to you I thought they were impractical Ignorant of smartness required To manage things through By far I thought I was the wise To have known it all Realized late in time How great was that fall Superficial logic, intellectual materialism Cloaked my natural state of true mind Boosting desires, sterile opinions Leaving the true sense behind I am thankful to the nature For giving me an opportune To study the greatest reality Why humans are marooned Time and space are eternal I am just the part of that infinite The one awarded with human form For some past intentions right I should not take pride in that For where I am today Later might be someone else’s part Man who decoded the mystery of mind Taught this decades ago Guard thoughts, actions, and speech To reach the real goal Not judge anything and any being Instead focus on developing clear seeing As everything is ever changing Including ones birth realms A full mind just exhibits knowledge Only in empty mind wisdom reaps Don’t get swayed by extremes Middle way is the path of keep Now I understand Message behind the moral stories What one sows is what one reaps One gets heavenly pleasures or hellish pain Exclusively based on law of deeds One gets what one deserves For law of nature never fails But latent power within Can turn it all around If not enlightenment One can at least find in life A decent ground Now and in future!*
Continue reading...
56
It was 11 o'clock when they told me you were gone. 11 O'clock and I thought my dog had died or my dad's car had broken down or he lost his house maybe gotten sick and was in the hospital but it was at 11 o'clock that they told me you were gone. It's a feeling I'll never forget, one that I hope no one will have to encounter in their life. You were gone for a day before I knew. By a hand so familiar to you. A hand that had rubbed your stomach when it was upset trying to calm it, a hand that had made you soup when your nose was stuffed and sticky, a hand that created beautiful masterpieces no matter the canvas. You wrote a different kind of line, one with pink and purple and blue. They crossed and conjoined and streamlined across the world. You wrote a different kind of story. A story where you had it all together. A story where the main character never lost his smile even though he faced troubles unbeknownst to everyone. You painted a story of strength and virtue and people of all ages (young and old) hoped to be like you when they grew up. It was 11 o'clock and nothing could have prepared me for the news of your departure. All of the pain I've felt, all of the books I've read, news articles with similar stories, NOTHING could have prepared me for this one. Because this time the story was mine. Uncle Darrell, it was at 11 o'clock when they told me you left us. 11 o'clock is no longer a time I wish to be awake. 11 o'clock was on a Friday. I no longer like Friday's. At 11 o'clock I realized I hadn't been awarded the chance to see you one last time before it all came to a halt for you. At 11 O'clock I took in the fact that I will never see you again, nobody will. At 11 O'clock I found out I would not be making it to your wake. 11 O'clock has turned into both a time and a place since then. 11 O'clock is now a time when tears dare to fall from my eyes. 11 O'clock is now a place, it's a world without you in it. A place where people come to commemorate your life; where people come to celebrate the fact that someone as angelic as you once walked this earth. You were a blessing unto every person you have met and you will never be forgotten. I love you Uncle Darrell I hope that one day I will see you again.
0
Dec 3, 2015
Dec 3, 2015 at 7:22 AM UTC
11 O'clock
It was 11 o'clock when they told me you were gone. 11 O'clock and I thought my dog had died or my dad's car had broken down or he lost his house maybe gotten sick and was in the hospital but it was at 11 o'clock that they told me you were gone. It's a feeling I'll never forget, one that I hope no one will have to encounter in their life. You were gone for a day before I knew. By a hand so familiar to you. A hand that had rubbed your stomach when it was upset trying to calm it, a hand that had made you soup when your nose was stuffed and sticky, a hand that created beautiful masterpieces no matter the canvas. You wrote a different kind of line, one with pink and purple and blue. They crossed and conjoined and streamlined across the world. You wrote a different kind of story. A story where you had it all together. A story where the main character never lost his smile even though he faced troubles unbeknownst to everyone. You painted a story of strength and virtue and people of all ages (young and old) hoped to be like you when they grew up. It was 11 o'clock and nothing could have prepared me for the news of your departure. All of the pain I've felt, all of the books I've read, news articles with similar stories, NOTHING could have prepared me for this one. Because this time the story was mine. Uncle Darrell, it was at 11 o'clock when they told me you left us. 11 o'clock is no longer a time I wish to be awake. 11 o'clock was on a Friday. I no longer like Friday's. At 11 o'clock I realized I hadn't been awarded the chance to see you one last time before it all came to a halt for you. At 11 O'clock I took in the fact that I will never see you again, nobody will. At 11 O'clock I found out I would not be making it to your wake. 11 O'clock has turned into both a time and a place since then. 11 O'clock is now a time when tears dare to fall from my eyes. 11 O'clock is now a place, it's a world without you in it. A place where people come to commemorate your life; where people come to celebrate the fact that someone as angelic as you once walked this earth. You were a blessing unto every person you have met and you will never be forgotten. I love you Uncle Darrell I hope that one day I will see you again.
Continue reading...
1
Corina Junghiatu is a bilingual poet/writer hailing from Romania. She holds a Master Degree in Philology and Phychopedagogy and likewise she graduated from The Faculty of Letters and Philosophy in Bucharest. She speaks five foreign languages. Corina has written and publishing two books of poetry: „Exile in the light” and „The ritual of a Sunrise”. She is Administrator and Publication Coordinator of Motivational Strips, editor of "Bharath Vision" website, and Chief Advisor of World Nations Writers' Union Kazakhstan. Corina has won many awards from international institutions of repute, for poetry. Recently, Corina Junghiatu, together with 350 poets and writers from 80 countries, received a certificate of appreciation for her entire literary activity, on the occasion of the 74th anniversary of the Independence Day of the Republic of India. This certificate was was handed by the famous writer Shiju H. Pallithazheth the Founder of Motivational Strips, World's Most Active Writers Forum and Padma Shree Dr. Vishnu Pandya, President of Gujarat Sahitya Akademy, a government institution of the state of Gujarat (India).
0
Aug 31, 2020
Aug 31, 2020 at 10:45 AM UTC
Corina Junghiatu awarded by Motivational Strips and Gujarat Sahitya Akademy.
Going Off To War (a/k/a Washing The Dishes) When its time to wash the dishes, I make proper preparations for this serious business, I strip down to my skivvies (shorts, in a prior generation) Cause there will plenty blood and gore afore too long Soap and water flying about, the ceilings and the walls, Not to mention big, big puddles on the floor. Multi-colored sponges of sizes varied, Some Brillo-sided, like extra armor on a tank, By Dawn's early light, turn the clear water Into a heaving, breathing soapy concoction. Woebegone and woe betide, dried and sticky maple syrup, You are no match for super-strength orange dishwashing solution, Of the Greeks did praise, a single dollop packs a mighty wallop! Ain't afraid of any stain, decomposing, half chewed, culinary rejection. Don't even bother with rubber gloves, cause that's for sissies. The dirtier the better, cause I love the sounds of All out war, the rushing water, the futile screams of Grease departing this world, down the rabbit hole, My gleaming, victorious sinking of the enemy shipping You think I am the first to celebrate in verse This storied fight of right over dirt? Recall please this famed couplet, for now be known its true inspiration! "Oh, say can you see by the Dawn's early light What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?" Though Men Like to Load the Dishwasher (You Didn't Know?) Is another poem of a similar ilk, when technology is unavailable, It is fact verifiable and unassailable, That if you give a man some room and some privacy, Ignore the shouts and war cries from the kitchen emanating, Male aggression can best be expiated, When playing war games in the kitchen, a live action movie, A video game that never grows tiresome, And violence is necessary, for the enemy's complete annihilation. Thank you my dear, no medal need be awarded, Scored this poem as my just reward.
0
May 26, 2013
May 26, 2013 at 12:23 PM UTC
Men Going Off To War (a/k/a Washing The Dishes)
Going Off To War (a/k/a Washing The Dishes) When its time to wash the dishes, I make proper preparations for this serious business, I strip down to my skivvies (shorts, in a prior generation) Cause there will plenty blood and gore afore too long Soap and water flying about, the ceilings and the walls, Not to mention big, big puddles on the floor. Multi-colored sponges of sizes varied, Some Brillo-sided, like extra armor on a tank, By Dawn's early light, turn the clear water Into a heaving, breathing soapy concoction. Woebegone and woe betide, dried and sticky maple syrup, You are no match for super-strength orange dishwashing solution, Of the Greeks did praise, a single dollop packs a mighty wallop! Ain't afraid of any stain, decomposing, half chewed, culinary rejection. Don't even bother with rubber gloves, cause that's for sissies. The dirtier the better, cause I love the sounds of All out war, the rushing water, the futile screams of Grease departing this world, down the rabbit hole, My gleaming, victorious sinking of the enemy shipping You think I am the first to celebrate in verse This storied fight of right over dirt? Recall please this famed couplet, for now be known its true inspiration! "Oh, say can you see by the Dawn's early light What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?" Though Men Like to Load the Dishwasher (You Didn't Know?) Is another poem of a similar ilk, when technology is unavailable, It is fact verifiable and unassailable, That if you give a man some room and some privacy, Ignore the shouts and war cries from the kitchen emanating, Male aggression can best be expiated, When playing war games in the kitchen, a live action movie, A video game that never grows tiresome, And violence is necessary, for the enemy's complete annihilation. Thank you my dear, no medal need be awarded, Scored this poem as my just reward.
Continue reading...
36
A future New York City Subway car ordered for the B Division. It will replace the aging fleet of R-32s and R-42s and expand the fleet for the Second Avenue Subway. The contract to build these cars has been awarded to Bombardier Transportation who will build the cars at it's Plattsburgh, New York facility. The base order for the R-179 will be approximately 290 cars with an option of 300 cars. And it's expected to enter service between 2016 and 2022.
0
Oct 27, 2015
Oct 27, 2015 at 11:10 AM UTC
R-179 (New York City Subway car).
staying up late just thinking of all the could-beens and should-beens that could and should have been us. what if we'd tried a little harder? persisted a little longer? held on to each other as tightly as we should have? would you be by my side then, instead of the empty void staring tauntingly back at me? would our hands be clasped together, interwoven, your eyes that once bored right back into the back of mind haunting me wherever i would go, your touch tattooed into the skin of my palms as they once were? what if i hadn't let go? what if i'd learnt fate's cruel lesson that possessing the trait of fickleness never awarded anything but everything slipping past, earlier? would you be willing to stay with me then, and forgive me for all the wrongdoings that i would inevitably cause? would we have ever evolved into more than just an idealized dream drawn from a fragmented memory, the idea of an irrevocable love that despite having been mulled over for what would've seemed like an eternity, has never seen the light of reality before? then again, everything does appear only better when it's all in your head. when i can still pretend that you are who i expect you to be, and i may be accepted for who i am truly, excess baggage of unneeded insecurities and imperfections weighing me down and all. is it better to be cleanly rejected or to be torn down bit by bit, night by night, spent just staring at a blank screen and waiting, hovering over imperishably, pure naive hope fuelling the drive to continue delaying the inexorable? foolishly believing that crossed fingers and any lingering feelings that hadn't yet been sieved away by the jaded culture we exist and drown in today would perhaps, even if accidentally, as if out of a fairytale that i starkly don't belong to, send me a text back?
0
Jul 25, 2018
Jul 25, 2018 at 7:06 PM UTC
send me a text back
staying up late just thinking of all the could-beens and should-beens that could and should have been us. what if we'd tried a little harder? persisted a little longer? held on to each other as tightly as we should have? would you be by my side then, instead of the empty void staring tauntingly back at me? would our hands be clasped together, interwoven, your eyes that once bored right back into the back of mind haunting me wherever i would go, your touch tattooed into the skin of my palms as they once were? what if i hadn't let go? what if i'd learnt fate's cruel lesson that possessing the trait of fickleness never awarded anything but everything slipping past, earlier? would you be willing to stay with me then, and forgive me for all the wrongdoings that i would inevitably cause? would we have ever evolved into more than just an idealized dream drawn from a fragmented memory, the idea of an irrevocable love that despite having been mulled over for what would've seemed like an eternity, has never seen the light of reality before? then again, everything does appear only better when it's all in your head. when i can still pretend that you are who i expect you to be, and i may be accepted for who i am truly, excess baggage of unneeded insecurities and imperfections weighing me down and all. is it better to be cleanly rejected or to be torn down bit by bit, night by night, spent just staring at a blank screen and waiting, hovering over imperishably, pure naive hope fuelling the drive to continue delaying the inexorable? foolishly believing that crossed fingers and any lingering feelings that hadn't yet been sieved away by the jaded culture we exist and drown in today would perhaps, even if accidentally, as if out of a fairytale that i starkly don't belong to, send me a text back?
Continue reading...
29
You were at the park, sitting all alone I slowly walk towards you, like coming back home You look so devastated, so i red you between the lines I saw something bright into your eyes that makes me gaze from time to time An interesting story, written by a majestic multi-awarded author I want to be with you in a journey, that's all I ever hoped for To knit some memories with you, to treasure every moments Replace the aura of this place with pure euphoria elements I want to be your jester, to tell jokes whenever you want to laugh To do something distinct, like seeking the 'Great Perhaps' But then you keep on telling me about this ghost in your past that haunts you I listened like a child craving for bed time stories, that's what you want to All of my thoughts suddenly dispersed and tossed like waste, This will all end soon like my oblivious phase.
0
Jul 6, 2015
Jul 6, 2015 at 2:43 AM UTC
'Infatuation'
For the days when your ego slaps itself as if it’s playing hambone, remember: there’s a name for the smell of rain on pavement. And every photograph is like Stockholm Syndrome, where subjects fall in love with their captors. You are no victim. That’s why I still don’t know whether you’re photogenic. All I ask is that you keep photographing my self-portraits, so that I may love you through the way I view myself. Because my ego is more like that potato clock from the science fair: surprisingly electric, yet full of holes. My skin is pierced with nails, but I am no Christ. It’s just my job to keep time. That’s why first place goes to the skateboarding rat. The judges don’t like me because I don’t believe in gimmicks. But when you look at me--alligator clips and all-- your eyes become blue ribbons, letting me know that I have won and you intend to claim your prize. “Let’s take a photo,” I say. You say no, that taking pictures will make us like everyone else. I ask why it matters if we know we’re not. You look down at the newspaper. In my mind, I say your name. And when you look up from the politics section, I snap a photo for good measure. This plan seems completely doable until I realize I’ve never called you by your name. You call me by mine, and attach it to sayings like “No one will ever bring half a smile to my face like you do” or “Hi” or “How are you?” or “I love you.” Is this because there’s only me or because there’ve been others besides me? If I were to succeed in capturing you, I imagine you’d have red eyes in the photo. Red ribbons to let me know I’ll never top second place, that there are other girls you’ve been inside of, but you are my only. No contest. And yet you ask if I’ve awarded any other blue ribbons. You don’t believe me when I say, “No.” I know you asked as a way to boost your ego, but for the days when your ego slaps itself as if it’s playing hambone, remember: there’s a name for the smell of rain on pavement, and that your wish to feel special should never be at my expense.
0
Aug 5, 2012
Aug 5, 2012 at 2:06 PM UTC
Petrichor
For the days when your ego slaps itself as if it’s playing hambone, remember: there’s a name for the smell of rain on pavement. And every photograph is like Stockholm Syndrome, where subjects fall in love with their captors. You are no victim. That’s why I still don’t know whether you’re photogenic. All I ask is that you keep photographing my self-portraits, so that I may love you through the way I view myself. Because my ego is more like that potato clock from the science fair: surprisingly electric, yet full of holes. My skin is pierced with nails, but I am no Christ. It’s just my job to keep time. That’s why first place goes to the skateboarding rat. The judges don’t like me because I don’t believe in gimmicks. But when you look at me--alligator clips and all-- your eyes become blue ribbons, letting me know that I have won and you intend to claim your prize. “Let’s take a photo,” I say. You say no, that taking pictures will make us like everyone else. I ask why it matters if we know we’re not. You look down at the newspaper. In my mind, I say your name. And when you look up from the politics section, I snap a photo for good measure. This plan seems completely doable until I realize I’ve never called you by your name. You call me by mine, and attach it to sayings like “No one will ever bring half a smile to my face like you do” or “Hi” or “How are you?” or “I love you.” Is this because there’s only me or because there’ve been others besides me? If I were to succeed in capturing you, I imagine you’d have red eyes in the photo. Red ribbons to let me know I’ll never top second place, that there are other girls you’ve been inside of, but you are my only. No contest. And yet you ask if I’ve awarded any other blue ribbons. You don’t believe me when I say, “No.” I know you asked as a way to boost your ego, but for the days when your ego slaps itself as if it’s playing hambone, remember: there’s a name for the smell of rain on pavement, and that your wish to feel special should never be at my expense.
Continue reading...
39
THE Colonel went out sailing, He spoke with Turk and Jew, With Christian and with Infidel, For all tongues he knew. "O what's a wifeless man?' said he, And he came sailing home. He rose the latch and went upstairS And found an empty room. The Colonel went out sailing. "I kept her much in the country And she was much alone, And though she may be there,' he said, "She may be in the town. She may be all alone there, For who can say?' he said. "I think that I shall find her In a young man's bed.' The Colonel went out sailing. III The Colonel met a pedlar, Agreed their clothes to swop, And bought the grandest jewelry In a Galway shop, Instead of thread and needle put jewelry in the pack, Bound a thong about his hand, Hitched it on his back. The Colonel wcnt out sailing. The Colonel knocked on the rich man's door, "I am sorry,' said the maid, "My mistress cannot see these things, But she is still abed, And never have I looked upon Jewelry so grand.' "Take all to your mistress,' And he laid them on her hand. The Colonel went out sailing. And he went in and she went on And both climbed up the stair, And O he was a clever man, For he his slippers wore. And when they came to the top stair He ran on ahead, His wife he found and the rich man In the comfort of a bed. The Colonel went out sailing. The Judge at the Assize Court, When he heard that story told, Awarded him for damages Three kegs of gold. The Colonel said to Tom his man, "Harness an *** and cart, Carry the gold about the town, Throw it in every patt.' The Colonel went out sailing. VII And there at all street-corners A man with a pistol stood, And the rich man had paid them well To shoot the Colonel dead; But they threw down their pistols And all men heard them swear That they could never shoot a man Did all that for the poor. The Colonel went out sailing. VIII "And did you keep no gold, Tom? You had three kegs,' said he. "I never thought of that, Sir.' "Then want before you die.' And want he did; for my own grand-dad Saw the story's end, And Tom make out a living From the seaweed on the strand. The Colonel went out sailing.
0
2.2k
Colonel Martin
THE Colonel went out sailing, He spoke with Turk and Jew, With Christian and with Infidel, For all tongues he knew. "O what's a wifeless man?' said he, And he came sailing home. He rose the latch and went upstairS And found an empty room. The Colonel went out sailing. "I kept her much in the country And she was much alone, And though she may be there,' he said, "She may be in the town. She may be all alone there, For who can say?' he said. "I think that I shall find her In a young man's bed.' The Colonel went out sailing. III The Colonel met a pedlar, Agreed their clothes to swop, And bought the grandest jewelry In a Galway shop, Instead of thread and needle put jewelry in the pack, Bound a thong about his hand, Hitched it on his back. The Colonel wcnt out sailing. The Colonel knocked on the rich man's door, "I am sorry,' said the maid, "My mistress cannot see these things, But she is still abed, And never have I looked upon Jewelry so grand.' "Take all to your mistress,' And he laid them on her hand. The Colonel went out sailing. And he went in and she went on And both climbed up the stair, And O he was a clever man, For he his slippers wore. And when they came to the top stair He ran on ahead, His wife he found and the rich man In the comfort of a bed. The Colonel went out sailing. The Judge at the Assize Court, When he heard that story told, Awarded him for damages Three kegs of gold. The Colonel said to Tom his man, "Harness an *** and cart, Carry the gold about the town, Throw it in every patt.' The Colonel went out sailing. VII And there at all street-corners A man with a pistol stood, And the rich man had paid them well To shoot the Colonel dead; But they threw down their pistols And all men heard them swear That they could never shoot a man Did all that for the poor. The Colonel went out sailing. VIII "And did you keep no gold, Tom? You had three kegs,' said he. "I never thought of that, Sir.' "Then want before you die.' And want he did; for my own grand-dad Saw the story's end, And Tom make out a living From the seaweed on the strand. The Colonel went out sailing.
Continue reading...
75
" The year was 1968. My journey in life took me to a place so unfamiliar to me. Fort Ord Army Base. There is where i began my Manhood. (Boot Camp) Week after week of drills that brought sweat out of me that i never knew existed. This was in Northern California. Land of American beauty. Yet i was in Hell. All we thought at that time was, can we make it through? Then beyond any notice to us, we were all called out for a roll call.. The Commanding Officer awarded us with a weekend pass. The cheer was so loud i thought i was in a Football stadium. We were dismissed, and packed to see what "I Once Saw." First stop. A town called Carmel. Cobblestone streets, trees with leaves of color as if they were born out of a Kaleidoscope. It was though i was living in a Charles Dickens novel. I walked through stores that held no dust. Nothing out of place, they had a Heavenly touch. When i stopped for a bite to eat. Even that was an unforgettable experience. The food tasted much better. I didn't want to leave my seat. What captured me the most as i strolled through these impressive streets of Carmel, was a view in where i stood overlooking the Pacific Ocean. "BIG SUR". I almost fainted. A sight so beautiful to my eyes i wondered Why? Why do so many people leave this great land of ours to go on vacations elsewhere? To be standing on a cliff looking at the raging ocean waves pounding the walls of these mighty rocks. "As I Once Saw" I yearn for more. A sight that comes to me in so many of my nights. Branded in my mind for the rest of my life."
0
Aug 17, 2016
Aug 17, 2016 at 12:33 PM UTC
"As I Once saw"
" The year was 1968. My journey in life took me to a place so unfamiliar to me. Fort Ord Army Base. There is where i began my Manhood. (Boot Camp) Week after week of drills that brought sweat out of me that i never knew existed. This was in Northern California. Land of American beauty. Yet i was in Hell. All we thought at that time was, can we make it through? Then beyond any notice to us, we were all called out for a roll call.. The Commanding Officer awarded us with a weekend pass. The cheer was so loud i thought i was in a Football stadium. We were dismissed, and packed to see what "I Once Saw." First stop. A town called Carmel. Cobblestone streets, trees with leaves of color as if they were born out of a Kaleidoscope. It was though i was living in a Charles Dickens novel. I walked through stores that held no dust. Nothing out of place, they had a Heavenly touch. When i stopped for a bite to eat. Even that was an unforgettable experience. The food tasted much better. I didn't want to leave my seat. What captured me the most as i strolled through these impressive streets of Carmel, was a view in where i stood overlooking the Pacific Ocean. "BIG SUR". I almost fainted. A sight so beautiful to my eyes i wondered Why? Why do so many people leave this great land of ours to go on vacations elsewhere? To be standing on a cliff looking at the raging ocean waves pounding the walls of these mighty rocks. "As I Once Saw" I yearn for more. A sight that comes to me in so many of my nights. Branded in my mind for the rest of my life."
Continue reading...
30
End is the beginning of another doom, since evils are not born from wombs. A son he is to a mother, and so neglected are the symptoms. Good might be his foundation, but fate destroys it all. Struggle is pronounced, life on fire. endurance has limits, the strongest heart dies, an obstinate, wicked mind arises from ashes. Then are done the follies, so noticeable, he is criticized, is made the Villain. Then the head is on sale, with biddings so high. The team that preys on him, is awarded public acclaim. Then is he known in history, God of turmoil. Stories are made with him as a villain, and little children taught the false old rhyme, bad times may break, but real good stands undestroyed. Who is the real Villain is to be judged, As oldest rocks not always yield diamonds.
0
Dec 27, 2018
Dec 27, 2018 at 1:48 PM UTC
villain
Thank you for dinner, sorry I can't stay sorry I was born, sorry I can't pay Sorry I was around when you'd have me gone Sorry I got quiet when you went to turn me up The road ahead for me the road behind for you Should have packed and left you at night so I could finally pass death into the daylight Awarded for the conscious service I provide: Nothing Nothin? Nothing but crutches with smudges catching must in the closet touching another box in its depressing square Pictures, I burn them Dish? I break that. I'm just another broke ***** barefoot in a haystack Your clothes get acid Heart? I sever the artery. I'm just another childhood ruined with adult bad
0
Sep 19, 2015
Sep 19, 2015 at 9:24 PM UTC
Insomniacts: "Addition"
Vintage Chanel lives rent free in my mind the colors are deep, subtle and magical. Over time, the originally soft textures, become luscious, like a lover's caressing touch. In college, you dress down, you want to blend in, not stand out gods forbid you flag entitlement and draw envy's barbed compliments. The simple styles bear the twin burdens of camouflage and practicality. In Paris, fashion can be capricious, but elegance is a silent conversation, with its own intricate vocabulary in drape, line, fabric and in painstaking choice. In places where fashion matters - Paris, Manhattan, the Hamptons, it can signal position, the way uniforms signal authority everywhere. A splash of fashion can not only have a fabulous effect on how its wearer feels, it can tell important stories. I’m told that, in back rooms, where fortunes are awarded or lost, fashion can announce arrival, rank, and intent. It can whisper new wealth, in upstart display or a threadbare, silent duel with mounting debt . . Songs for this: The Way It Is by Bruce Hornsby & The Range Read Between the Lines by The Bingtones
0
Aug 5, 2024
Aug 5, 2024 at 2:21 PM UTC
fashion messaging
My fourteen year old daughter was the star of a children's TV show. But because she grew large ******* they decided to let her go. They said that because of her growth spurt, it would be inappropriate for her to be on a children's show. They said they were sure that I would understand but I was furious and I said "Hell no". I said that it was discrimination and it was an immoral reason for firing my teenage daughter. She was more than willing to sue because of the morals that my wife and I have taught her. It was wrong to fire her because of mother nature 's handiwork and the judge agreed. My daughter was awarded ten million dollars, that was what the judge decreed. We didn't sue because of the money, we sued to stand up to their discrimination. When I say that they didn't get away with what they did, it's not an exaggeration.
0
May 20, 2019
May 20, 2019 at 4:27 PM UTC
Why I Convinced My Daughter To Sue