What is Poetry?

I created this blog will be mainly all about Poetry, as the blog title has labeled it. And it may related to 'genocide' who knows? So stay tune, liked, subscribe by favoriting on your own computer. Thankx a lot! xxx

Friday, May 31, 2013

Ode to Pizza

To be honest,
For my entire
Life,
I have never
Eaten
Cheese
Before, except for
Cheese on the pizza.
When you crawl to
a slice
of pizza
It's like
A mouse scurrying to
That piece of cheese
On the TV.
What I like about
Pizza is
If there things
You dislike,
You just have to
Pick it out.
Or even better,
 make your
own pizza
at home,
mess it with
your family.
That's how I like
My pizza to be,
Feel the
homemade,
delicious,
thing, with the toppings
you love the most.
Feel the fresh
Tomato paste,
Touch the string
Mozzarella cheese you slice
Taste the sour
pineapple you cut.
Feel the fresh
Of everything.
To sense the complete taste,
You have to
eat it when it's
Burning.
That last thing is
The crust,
The crunchy end
You save for last,
The piece you fight over people,
That's what I like
About my pizza.

Dear Neighbor

Five-year-old girl 'raped for four days' after she was kidnapped by neighbor in third Delhi pedophile crime this month
·         Five-year-old kidnapped and raped by her neighbor in east Delhi
·         Man allegedly held her captive for four days, raped and mutilated her
·         Girl is fighting for her life in 'one of the worst cases' doctors have seen
PUBLISHED: 19:24 GMT, 19 April 2013 | UPDATED: 23:01 GMT, 19 April 2013

A five year old girl is fighting for her life after she was raped by a neighbor in Gandhi Nagar, east Delhi, who held her captive for four days.
The girl was kidnapped while playing outside her home and locked in her neighbor’s flat for days before someone heard her cries for help.
Doctors reported finding ‘foreign objects’ inside the girl’s genitals as the details of her horrific ordeal began to unfold.

Dear Neighbor

Small and innocent was I when I told my childhood good-bye
Bottled up inside, the words I’ve never spoke
The feelings that I hide
You can see it in my face
You can see it in my eyes
You might feel it if you bare the pain I did
Trapped inside are the fear I can’t replace

Four continuous nights of tragedy and pain
And every single night his footsteps come my way
Close my eyes tight, sink down, thought he might go away
Only that the door creaks open
And I hold my breath
What he is about to do is worse than death,

He sits in the corner, gets a cigarette and lights one up
The friendly neighbor I met in the morning
Gulps from the remained wine from his cup
Whispers, "I know you’re awake and I don't have much time."
My heart stops beating because he's about to commit a crime,

With memories that won’t seem to go away, still lingers
Seeing your face today
The same one I tried to block from my mind
Finally giving me closure so I can move on with my life
I was five years old
I didn’t know what sex was but you forced it upon me.
I blame myself for what you did and I couldn’t talk about it
Because I thought my life would end up in a mental place
I was five and all I wanted to do was play
You took all of my innocence away
Do you know how desperate it feels when every little thing
triggers that day in the dark cell, dear neighbor?



My Baby

That day, Lady Capulet give birth to her
Juliet cried and then slept on my arms
From then, I fed her with my own breast
She grew up fast together with my baby, who didn’t last long
God bless you Susan. Years had gone, but I’ll never forget
A sunny day, you were away
My husband and I, we stayed back to watch Juliet
And then she ran by, tripped, fell to her face
My husband came to pick her up, and she was crying very hard
He laughed and made a funny joke, “Dost thou fall upon thy face,
Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit, wilt thou not, Jule?”
That day, eleven years gone by, but I will keep play that again
Very soon, my baby would be fourteen
Then, she would get marry
My baby would be a lady, mature, not a little kid
She will give birth to another child, like you
I’ll care for the child
Just like I did with Juliet
Feeding from my own breast
And raising the child up, every day, until he would get married
I will retired then
I’m honored for the time I take care of Capulets

Aura's Life (based on the book "Blue Moon")

Auras of people keep appear (a-b-b-a)
Now I'm people's thought analyst
After the red car accident
Now my vision is never clear.

The auras are like red blue kites (c-d-d-c)
Gracefully dot the school playground
The closer someone come around
I can simply see all their nights,

I turned to emo as you can see (e-f-f-e)
Plugging in loud headphones in class,
I have to fake struggle to pass
All the tests that are given to me.

Why? 'Cause now my brain is fill up (g-h-h-g)
With history, and the future
Of people, this isn't treasure,
And I received a two-friend club

In summer, I can't spend time in (i-j-j-i)
Brown sand between my warming toes
Joining in the tan bodies rows 
Along the beach, (oh) what to begin!

The only one I can talk to (k-l-l-k)
Is my sister who is a ghost
Said I'm the one who suffer most
Ask why I always feeling blue

I guess this thing will never end (m-n-n-m)
Think of the other side, finding
Someone who is not whining
About the gift that they was send.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Poetry Terms: Rhythm

Definition A sound patterns of certain repetition or a musical quality produced by the repetition of stressed and unstressed syllables.
Example
There once was a young girl named Jill.
Who was scared by the sight of a drill.
She brushed every day
So her dentist would say,
“Your teeth are so perfect; no bill.
Significance Movie has rhythm, rap has rhythm, romance music has rhythm, why not the poem people? The poems are just as complicated as others, like movie, songs, and speeches. It cost money and time. Just wait for the future and see. It is important to have rhythm in poem so the reader will feel more enthusiastic while reading the poem of anything. And don't even start to ask the question 'what is the anything?'

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Poetry Terms: Personification

Definition A figure  of speech's family. Metaphor's family. Describe an object or animal is spoken as if it is a person's feelings, thoughts or attitude.
Example
The leaves on the ground danced in the wind
The brook sang merrily as it went on its way.
The fence posts gossiped and watched cars go by
which winked at each other just to say hi.
The traffic lights yelled, ”Stop, slow, go!”
The tires gripped the road as if clinging to life.
Stars in the sky blinked and winked out
While the hail was as sharp as a knife.
~"My Town"
by unknown
Significance Easy, to describe an object or/and an animal more descriptively without dead/ennui words. Like this,

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Poetry Terms: Elegy

Definition A serious poem to reflect, for a lament/mourn of dead.
Example
O CAPTAIN! my Captain! our fearful trip is done;
The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won;
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:
But O heart! heart! heart!
O the bleeding drops of red,
Where on the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.


O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
Rise up--for you the flag is flung--for you the bugle trills; 10
For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths--for you the shores a-crowding;
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
Here Captain! dear father!
This arm beneath your head;
It is some dream that on the deck,
You've fallen cold and dead.


My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still;
My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will;
The ship is anchor'd safe and sound, its voyage closed and done;
From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won; 20
Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells!
But I, with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead. 
~O Captain! My Captain!
by Walt Whitman
Significance If there is a speech for death, then why not a long serious poem? It make more sense and more creative.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Poetry Terms: Alliteration

Definition The repetition of consonants sounds in words that are close together or near.
Example
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.
If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers,
Where's the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked?

I saw Susie sitting in a shoe shine shop.
Where she sits she shines, and where she shines she sits.

Luke Luck likes lakes.
Luke's duck likes lakes.
Luke Luck licks lakes.
Luck's duck licks lakes.
Duck takes licks in lakes Luke Luck likes.
Luke Luck takes licks in lakes duck likes.

Significance It is a type of poetic device that you should use in a while. It is good to use some words that is tongue twisting to re-awake the reader.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Poetry Terms: Symbol

Definition A person, a thing, or a place that is use to represent something.
Example
The bald eagle = the US, the star of David = the symbol of Judaism,  the cross = the symbol of Christianity, the sweater in "Sueter/Sweter" = the grandmother's love and caring.

Grandmother,
I'm cold;
can you knit me
some wrinkles?
"Sweater"
by Alberto Forcada
Significance In this case, poems use symbol are often for personal and surprising points. Using symbols will bring much alive description, instead of using the name again or 'it'. But also, it has to be specific so everyone read it will think of the same thing. If it is too general, then every different man kind with different live experience will misunderstood the poem/symbols.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Poetry Terms: Assonance

Definition Alliteration's family. The repetition of vowel sounds in words that are close together.
Example
Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.

Dead in the middle of little Italy, little did we know that we riddled two middle men who didn't do diddily.

And murmuring of innumerable bees.
Significance Assonance is like alliteration, or the tongue twisters game. It makes the poem more alive and who can do it are awesome, just like one of you. I promise you this will be fun, add to your poems and go fopdoodle [silly]

Friday, April 22, 2011

Poetry Terms: Couplet

Definition Two continuous lines of poetry that rhyme.
Significance I like these because these poems, such as couplet or haiku, challenge you to compose poems within many words and have a meaning with it. This is hard, but good for practicing. Keep it up everyone. And I am pretty sure the ancient Chinese used this a lot.
Example.

My Cat
By Molly
I like to play with my cat
He likes to get in a hat.

Good Vacation
By David
I like to play games a lot
I loved when it was hot.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Poetry Terms: Meter

Definition The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry.
Example
Iambic Pentameter: That time | of year | thou mayst | in me | behold
Trochaic Tetrameter: Tell me | not in | mournful | numbers
Significance In this one, I am not really sure about it, but if poems are like songs, songs are friend of poems, both should have stressed and unstressed syllables. I am probably sure, many artist change the stress to fit the rhythm of the music, so you and I probably couldn't here the stressed/unstressed of the songs, but poems are great. These things are the elements what make it a song.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Poetry Terms: Interpretation

Sign Language
Define The meaning/explanation of something.
Example This is use while readers are reading the poems, they interpret it.
Significance Most of the poem are depends on the life's of the author/writer, but sometimes they are meant for someone special. If a girl reading a romantic poem, she will feels much better, but if a boy is reading, he would be feeling to puke.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Poetry Terms: Speaker

Define The one who is reading the poem, or the first person perspective.
Example Reading with enunciation is a person who knows how to read poem, or to use the speaker/voice of the speaker.
Significance This is another basic rules, read the poem OUT LOUD. Reading silently are like reading story with robot voice in your head. You won't be able to notice what the poem really mean, your just reading to kill your time, am I right? So please do me a favor, read the poem aloud, reread it again until you understand it, please please, I beg you!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Poetry Terms: Tone

Define  The attitude of the writer toward the audience/readers. The pitch of the voice while reading expressing feelings and thoughts of the writer.
Example While you read/sing, you stress your voice to express the real feeling or you would just be a robot your whole life. Another purpose is when the character talk in the poem, the story.
Significance Tone is a basic things everyone should know while reading, if not using it, that is called making the audience sleep. It is very important using it while reading anything, to show the audience the important phrase, words and what should you be feeling right now. If you are reading the poem for deaths, the reader should show the audience the sympathize/empathize feelings.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Poetry Terms: Onomatopoeia

Define A word of the sound that sounds of the objects, like sizzle, cuckoo, crunch.
Example
... the moan of doves in immemorial elms,
And murmuring of innumerable bees.
or
Kaboom!
Ka-blast
Way in the past
the miners mined for ore.
They searched for copper, iron and salt,
for that and much, much more.

Kaboom!
The bite
of dynamite
cut deep inside the earth.
The charge explodes revealing lodes
of minerals of worth.

Kaboom!
The dust,
the air so mussed
went swirling through the sky.
It was a sight, the dynamite
that made the mountains fly.

Kaboom!
The earth
was filled with mirth
so tickled by the boom.
The miner's pleasure,
each new found treasure
that followed each
Kaboom!
~" Kaboom"
by Denise Rodgers
Significance Movies have sounds, musics have effects, why wouldn't poems have onomatopoeia? :]

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Poetry Terms: Lines

Definition Poetry's language. Poem's sentences. A single line of the poem.
Example There are six lines in the bottom poem.
A word is dead
When it is said,
Some say.

I say it just
Begins to live
That day. 
~"A word is dead"
by Emily Dickinson

Significance Without lines are like a paragraph without punctuations, or a paragraph with continuous run-on sentences, over and over again. Now pretend that you are the reader reading the things above, I think it would take millions of try to complete that. Try reading the whole paragraph non-stop. You would probably be blowing up right now, just like another balloon explode when they get to much air inside. Hope you see the importance of it.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Poetry Terms: Imagery

Definition Poetry's language.Visually descriptive or figurative language, especially in literary work. Not dead words, but descriptive words/language.
Example
The winter evening settles down
With smell of steaks in passageways.
Six o'clock.
The burnt-out ends of smoky days.
And now a gusty shower wraps
The grimy scraps
Of withered leaves about your feet
And newspapers from vacant lots;
The showers beat
On broken blinds and chimney-pots,
And at the corner of the street
A lonely cab-horse steams and stamps.
And then the lighting of the lamps.
~from "Preludes"
by T. S. Eliot

Significance Using imagery is like being descriptive, for example, from this "At dawn the sun peaks out from behind mountain tops. You can see the first rays of the sun grace the Earth." to this "Blazing ball of fire/scorching hot/sphere of golden/suspended in midair./fingers of warmth reaching out of the mountain peaks." Look how it change while you read it. Doesn't it amaze you with the imagery magic?...Hope you get the idea.

How about this? It is like writing a narrative or short story to catch the teacher's eyes, how would you make it works. That's right, using more adjective words for a better reader's viewing or to make the reader imagine the scene clearer with the descriptive words.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Poetry Terms: Extended Metaphor

Definition Metaphor's Family. A comparison of two unlike things that had a continuous series in a stanza or a line, without using like or as.
Significance It may help the poem by more a live to people. Most poets don't use extended metaphor that much, so it may make it more unique.
Example 
The willow is like an etching,
Fine-lined against the sky.
The ginkgo is like a crude sketch,
Hardly worthy to be signed.
The willow’s music is like a soprano,
Delicate and thin.
The ginkgo’s tune is like a chorus
With everyone joining in.
~"Willow and Ginkgo" 
by Eve Merriam

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Poetry Terms: Stanza

A Clock stopped—
Not the Mantel's—
Geneva's farthest skill
Can't put the puppet bowing—
That just now dangled still—
[First Stanza]
An awe came on the Trinket!
The Figures hunched, with pain—
Then quivered out of Decimals—
Into Degreeless Noon—
[Second Stanza]
It will not stir for Doctors—
This Pendulum of snow—
This Shopman importunes it—
While cool—concernless No—
[Third Stanza]
Nods from the Gilded pointers—
Nods from the Seconds slim—
Decades of Arrogance between
The Dial life—
And Him— 
[Fourth Stanza]
~"A Clock Stopped"
by Emily Dickinson


Definition Poetry's language. A paragraph
Example The poem above. There is four stanzas in that poem, but there is only two stanzas in the picture poem.
Significance Without stanza are like three paragraph in a essay [introduction, body, and conclusion] in one paragraph or many ideas in a paragraph. Probably you wouldn't like to read it either? Too many words make you dizzy and so to me! It would make the poem harder for us to understand. Let's not be confusing.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Poetry Terms: Simile

I ask them to take a poem
and hold it up to the light
like a color slide.
~from "Introduction to Poetry"
by Billy Collins

Definition A figure of speech, comparing two alike things with connecting words, such as like, as, than, and resembles.
Example The poem above
Significance Comparing things help things get a little easier, while you don't know how to describe the cold as harsh as you can without using the word harsh. Yeah, that's right, compare the cold to a nail, isn't that much easier for you.
Talk of your cold! through the parka's fold it stabbed like a driven nail.
~from "The Cremation of Sam McGee"
by Robert W. Service
Take time, the magic will come to you with this figure of speech. [sim-ee-ly]

Monday, April 11, 2011

Poetry Terms: Metaphor

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune--without the words,
And never stops at all,

And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.

I've heard it in the chillest land,
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity,
It asked a crumb of me.
~"Hope"
by Emily Dickinson

Definition A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable. Which simply means to make a comparison without using connecting words, such as like, as, than, and resembles.
Example The poem above. Writing about hopes are like birds. Flying and sharing by singing.
Significance This is a important figure of speech for writing poem. It is a good way to solve when you have used too much connecting words in the literature work. Another way to be descriptive and creative by comparing things to things, which is a way of avoiding the truth if you don't like admitting. Also, it takes time to use this strategy to 'parfait' it.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Types of Poetry: Free-verse

So complicated
That is what boys really are
With stupidity.
~by Mary Tran & Emily Lam

Definition It does not follow a meter or a rhythm scheme, but still including some of the other poetry's elements, such as imagery, rhyme, alliteration.
Example The poem above.

Types of Poetry: Elegies

Where are you Mom, where did you go
You have gone to a place I do not know
Your new world does not include me
It’s rather cloudy, from what I see
You sit there in your chair
With such a vacant empty stare
I wish I could bring back the better times
~Where Are You Mom
by Buddy

Definition  A poem usually for someone who has died.
Example The poem above.

Types of Poetry: Odes

I am new to writing poems and I hope I can learn from all of you.
By the way, I learned how to write this kind of poem because of
An Ode to Christmas. Thank you very much!
An Ode to Halloween
When you see a child
In a costume scary and wild
You know it is Halloween.

When kids go trick-or-treats
And get lots and lots of sweets
You know it is Halloween.

When the trees give up their yellow leaves
And the dead give back their R.I.P.s
You know it is Halloween.
~from "An Ode to Halloween"
by Andy Jin

Defnition Lyric's Family. Long, lyrics poems that are written to celebrate a famous person or a mighty idea.
Example The poem above.

Types of Poetry: Sonnets

I stroll along a fragrant country lane
With honeysuckle perfume on the air –
And feathered crooner’s warble to revere –
Then cross a golden sea of flowing grain 
~from "Wife to Be"
by Mark R Slaughter
Definition Lyric's Family. Always has fourteen lines long and usually has a specific meter.
Example The poem above.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Types of Poetry: Lyric

The old man
must have stopped our car
two dozen times to climb out
and gather into his hands
the small toads blinded
by our lights and leaping
live drops of rain. ...
~from "Birdfoot's Grampa"
by Joseph Bruchac

Definition Usually do not tell a story, but they express personal thoughts and feelings of the poet or the speaker.
Example The poem above

Types of Poetry: Epics

This poem is epic
so I named it so
it's more epic than wind and snow
which are in there own respects quite epic

~from "Epic Poems"
by Torben Ducan
Definition Narrative's family. Long narrative poems, originally used orally, that tells story about heroes/heroines.
Example The poem above.

Types of Poetry: Ballads

Light do I see within my Lady’s eyes
And loving spirits in its plenisphere
Which bear in strange delight on my heart’s care
Till Joy’s awakened from that sepulchre. 

~from "Ballata 5"
by Guido Cavalcanti

Definition Narrative's family. A songlike poem that tells a story. It is often about love, betrayal, or death. It usually have a steady rhythm and a simple rhyme pattern to complete the poem.
Example The poem above.