Tags : poetry

Learn To Let Go

Learn To Let Go

A Poem by Wonderland Asylum


We had a lot of funWhen we were togetherI'll never forgetI'll always rememberThe laughs that we sharedThe dreams that we hadBut those dreams changedAn..
How Does Love Taste?

How Does Love Taste?

A Poem by Alias


Kisses taste different when you're drunkThey taste stale and sloppyLike cigarettes and beer.They don't taste like love,they taste like lowered inhibit..
I'll Meet You At The Top

I'll Meet You At The Top

A Poem by Alias


I'm sorryI can't help you right nowI'm sorryI can't listen to your heartacheTruth isWe're both hanging by our fingertipsand though I see your fingers ..
The Nice Gift I Got For You

The Nice Gift I Got For You

A Poem by Ohioman


In this four-stanza etheree poem, a guy returns home from holiday shopping just in time to see what gift his wife got for him.
There Were Twelve Carriages

There Were Twelve Carriages

A Poem by Wallflower


Inspired by my forgotten inspiration.
You Really Are A True Stud

You Really Are A True Stud

A Poem by Ohioman


In this free verse poem, a guy wakes up so hungover... and not alone.
Stormy skies

Stormy skies

A Poem by Alexus Gassert


a soft yet true capturing of the changes in peace.
Fix You

Fix You

A Poem by Alexis Rikke


Read it.
Magnolia Trees

Magnolia Trees

A Poem by Alexis Rikke


A short nature themed poem.
A Poet I Once Knew

A Poet I Once Knew

A Poem by Alexis Rikke


Read please
When A Woman Loves A Man

When A Woman Loves A Man

A Poem by SJL


Thoughts and writings of mine from a journal entry dated May 10, 2014
The Moon and I

The Moon and I

A Poem by SJL


A simple free verse poem from one of my old journals.
Thank You

Thank You

A Poem by SJL


A free verse poem I jotted down today at work.
A Testimony That Never Ends

A Testimony That Never Ends

A Poem by Sarah Kaufmann


I wrote this one day on a whim because I needed to write something. I never planned to write about my experience with my faith, but here we are!
Stuck in a Box

Stuck in a Box

A Poem by Sarah Kaufmann


This is a creative response to "The Children's Hour" by Lillian Hellman