Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 6 dias · Settling and stirring like blown paper. Or the hands of an invalid. The wan. Sun manages to strike such tin glints. From the linked ponds that my eyes wince. And brim; the city melts like sugar. A crocodile of small girls. Knotting and stopping, ill-assorted, in blue uniforms, Opens to swallow me.

  2. Há 3 dias · Metaphors. A melon strolling on two tendrils. O red fruit, ivory, fine timbers! This loaf's big with its yeasty rising. Money 's new-minted in this fat purse. I'm a means, a stage, a cow in calf. Boarded the train there's no getting off. I'm a riddle in nine syllables, An elephant, a ponderous house, A melon strolling on two tendrils. O red ...

  3. 2 de mai. de 2024 · Sheep greens, finned falls, -I shall compose a crisis. To stun sky black out, drive gibbering mad. Trout, cock, ram, That bulk so calm. On my jealous stare, Self-sufficient as they are.'. But no hocus-pocus of green angels. Damasks with dazzle the threadbare eye; -My trouble, doctor, is: I see a tree,

  4. Há 2 dias · Emily Dickinson (2414 poems) 2. Madison Julius Cawein (1231 poems) 3. Ella Wheeler Wilcox (1136 poems) 4. William Wordsworth (1016 poems) 5. Robert Burns (986 poems) 6. Edgar Albert Guest (945 poems) 7. Thomas Moore (849 poems) 8. Robert Service (831 poems)

  5. Há 2 dias · I Want, I Want. Cried out for the mother 's dug. Sand abraded the milkless lip. Engineered the gannet's beak. Thorns on the bloody rose -stem. Open-mouthed, the baby god Immense, bald, though baby-headed, Cried out for the mother's dug. The dry volcanoes cracked and split, Sand abraded the milk.

  6. 17 de mai. de 2024 · These poems will help dethaw your spirit, embrace the beauty around you, and put a spring in your step—and in your writing! “Prologue to Spring” by Sylvia Plath. In “Prologue to Spring,” Plath ruminates on how the beginning of spring carries a kind of stillness, almost as if the world is waking up from winter.

  7. 7 de mai. de 2024 · Explores Sylvia Plath’s enduring interest and active practice in mysticism and the occult from childhood until her tragic death in 1963 • Decodes the alchemical, Qabalistic, hermetic, spiritual, and Tarot-related references in many of Plath’s poems