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Do you know anything about this topic? Share your expertise with our thousands of visitors each day by submitting your quality, informative 'Personal Pages Poetry' article, and if you become a member we will pay you for your unique and original work (note that all submissions are reviewed by our editors). Your Personal Pages Poetry Guide is Michael Russell. Recent articles submitted to your independent guide to Personal Pages Poetry 1. Poetry Tips - By: Dennis Siluk Here are some tips that come to mind, things I use in poetry, and perhaps do not always use, and should: 1—I find [or believe] a ‘fact,’ in poetry, is not poetry, nor can it move the mind’s eye, thoughts, and one’s imagination. 2—... Featured ArticlePersonal Web Page #7 I setup my first personal web page when I was in high school, partially to see if I could do it and partially because of the novelty of the thing. I used it to keep people up to date on what was going on in my life as a sort of public diary. It was a blog (or weB LOG), and though few people knew what a blog was back then, now just about everyone knows what a blog is and what it can do. For those who dont, a blog is a website with usually consists of posts entered at successive dates; these po ...
Read full story 2. What Use Poetry? Featured Book: Tracings By Carolyn Howard-johnson - By: Kristin Johnson In the Red Engine Press January 2006 newsletter, "Yardspinners and Wordweavers," Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of Tracings, writes: "Auden thought the purpose of poetry is to disenchant. That, my reader, may be why I am not much for rhyme or pretty, though I do like food imag... 3. No Time, No Poetry - By: Ken Lizotte In his book, The Future of Success, former Clinton cabinet member Robert Reich rails about how everyone--and he means EVERYONE--can be found struggling today to do more, be more, cram more in. For workers this means embracing the belief they cannot stop for a moments rest at their jobs f... 4. If You Are Chasing The Most Up-to-date Opinion Pertaining To Love Poetry. - By: Tom If you are chasing the most up-to-date opinion pertaining to love poetry. When you're seeking the best information about love poetry, you'll find it hard unscrambling quality advice from inexpert love poetry proposals and directions so it is wise to know how to moderate the information you ar... 5. Poetry - By: Michael Russell Serious poets spend their lives crafting with words. Serious poets practice and study and practice some more. And serious poets also use the world as their implements. It might seem antithetical to use poetry tools to write poetry, but poets do it all the timetaking ideas and inspiration from the... 6. Wedding Poetry - By: Dorothy Miller Poetry is the language of love. For centuries, poems have expressed intimate feelings and emotions, and have been used to record significant thoughts and events in an artistic form. Naturally, a wedding ceremony is the perfect forum for a heartfelt poetry reading. Wedding poetry is a love... 7. Poetry Is Hot For The Summer! - By: Michelle L Devon As the days of summer begin to heat up across the country, the chores of the day drag on, and with the children home from school, mom may find she doesn't seem to have much time to herself anymore. Gone are the days of fall and spring in which the kids are at school for 8 hours a day, an... 8. Modern Poetry - Poetry For Everyone - By: Michelle L Devon Poetry has changed over the years, and modern poetry is not the same eclectic and elitist prose you may remember from your high school reading. Modern poetry is written in plain English, filled with imagery and emotion, and is so much easier to read than poetry of the past. If you haven'... 9. Make A Chapbook Of Your Poetry - By: Rose Desrochers Poetry is a hard thing to market; it could take years to get your work published by a traditional publisher so why not publish your own chapbook. A chapbook is "a small book or pamphlet containing poems, ballads, stories, or religious tracts" (dictionary) the term is still used today to refer to sho... 10. Who Is Afraid Of Poetry? - By: Joy Cagil In the writing site where I belong, there is a SLAM underway. It is not the kind of oral SLAM that goes on in the coffee houses, but it is a friendly online poetry competition that is considered a huge event by our members. Poetry is a big craze in our site, and although the site is a ge... 11. I Am An Artist! Seeking Out Creativity - Sometimes I'm Inspired By My Own Poetry - By: Kathy Ostman-magnusen Ever since I was a little girl art has been my world. I made mud pies, paper-dolls, and connected with any of my mother's friends who seemed creative. I remember a friend of hers who lived down the street from us who painted her bathroom black and wore crazy clothes. I LOVED her! I l... 12. Poetry Speaks To The Whole Family - By: Rachael Towle From the moment the shiny new book arrived at my doorstep, I was excited to see what this incredible creation had in store for my son and for me. From the moment I cracked open the spine, I realized it delivers more than I had hoped it would. Poetry Speaks to Children is a collect... 13. Writing Prose Vs. Poetry In Plays (and: The Fingers Of Grammara) - By: Dennis Siluk I have written plays in poetry, and in prose, it is by far livelier, if not more spontaneous also (and a greater achievement, more complicated), and more complete with emotional triggers, to have it in poetry vs. prose. Prose being undoubtedly the more thin, or soupy of the tw... 14. Religious Metaphysical Poetry: Donne, Herbert, Vaughan - By: Ian Mackean John Donne (1572-1631) established what has become known as the Metaphysical style of poetry which was taken up by later poets such as George Herbert (1593-1633) and Henry Vaughan (1622-95). Some of the chief characteristics of Donne's style are: the abrupt opening of a poem with a surp... 15. Poetry - By: Michael Russell Anybody who can write a coherent letter can write poetry. Most of us have just gotten intimidated along the way. So we don't try. Maybe it was back in an English class when the poets assigned for reading used flowery, old fashioned, obscure language. Or maybe we tried to write poetry, showed our wor... 16. Getting Published: Publishing Tips And Advice From Rose Desrochers - By: (see Article) It appears that today everyone is a writer, and we all have the same dream. We all hope to someday be published. So as writers, where do we get started? I suggest joining writing groups first and start seeking feedback that can help your career as a writer. It... 17. Poetry - By: Michael Russell Everyday we all read countless words. We read words on signs, on menus, and on buses. We read words in the grocery store and at the coffee shop. We certainly read words at the library, and in the morning paper. So often, and even perhaps too often, these words that we read day-to-day pass by us ... 18. Poetry In Turbulence - By: Jeffrey Side To many non-specialists of literature, poetry is deeply unsatisfying. There are several reasons for this, but two in particular come to mind. The first is that most poetry is overly descriptive, leaving little to the imagination; the second is that the rest of it is abstruse. This presen... 19. Straight From The Heavens: Li Bai's Poetry In Retrospect - By: Gerald Marchewka Some may argue that Chinese poet Li Bai is beyond compare. With words that seem to fall straight from the heavens, he, perhaps like no other poet can make us both feel the earth and touch the sky. Born during China's illustrious Tang Dynasty, Li Bai could in modern day terms b... 20. Publishing Poetry In Newspapers: Where To Submit - By: Melanie Simms According to Dana Gioia, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, "Daily newspapers no longer review poetry. There is, in fact, little coverage of poetry or poets in the general press". (Can Poetry Matter, Dana Gioia, 1991). John Timpane, Philadelphia Inquirer Commenta... 21. Poetry - Connecting With Your Readers - By: Kit Marsters When I first started writing poetry, I had no idea about all the different forms. I had no idea about imagery, nor did I know that the different sections of my poems were called stanzas. I wrote poetry because I enjoyed it and because it was an emotional outlet. Pouring my thoughts and f... 22. Publishing Your Own Book Of Poetry - By: Peggy Eldridge-love Many established poets published themselves initially, some of them do so continually. In the literary arena that currently exists this is very acceptable and respected. But before you consider self-publishing consider the following. Does your poetry hold universal appeal? You ... 23. Gilleland Poetry - Storoems And Poems - Review - By: Lillian Brummet "Retired professor of Microbiology, Harry Gilleland certainly has a variety of experiences and thought-provoking insights to share in his latest poetry book, Gilleland Poetry Storoems and Poems. Harrys poetry has appeared at numerous establishments over the years and he has au... 24. Poetry Is For Writers More Than Readers - By: Steven Gillman What is poetry? The meaning is apparently difficult enough that my dictionary uses circular defining. "The art or work of a poet" is the first entry. The other two definitions don't clarify this much. I might define it as "The use of words in a primarily artistic (as opposed to informati... 25. For The Love Of Poetry - By: Terry Coyier "Work is love made visible. And if you cannot work with love but only with distaste, it is better that you should leave your work and sit at the gates of the temple and take alms of those who work with joy. For if you bake bread with indifference, you bake a bitter ... Please feel free to submit your quality, informative article for our readers. |
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