Friday, March 26, 2010
The Rose of Sharon
The Rose of Sharon I wrote this poem in honor of non-Japanese who took the course of the Japanese American Bainbridge Island, WA, during World War II Japanese American intement. If it were any of these people. Most other Americans uprooted JA goods, and purchased their homes in the U.S. govement to cheap.However, I must wa you that the historical event referred to above is not really what this is about poetry. This is a series of images that deal with life in general on Bainbridge Island and do not relate directly to the intement at all, now that you are notified, go to the front and read to your heart for content.In this session of the poetry of words to 200 words or more, a brief lesson on the form is required. Poetry is below informally called "haiku", which is a Japanese style of poetry that is supposed onomotopaeic conj an image or multiple images in your mind. Onomotopaeia refers to terms such as "splash" that emblamize sound. Some haiku is very determined and set in his meter, and is limited to a fixed amount of rows. The poem is below Americanized haiku, which means that it is more "free verse" in his style, and that this is not exactly held in strict Sharon standards.Roses broken hand. The moon is the guide, Again and again, Muddy bean paste Mixed with vinegar. Rames waves struck. My old car seat new Con un po 'di follia in me. A large avalanche Not all of its filling; piercing alarm to drive a rate far Beautiful couple pears in his garden, Who is my neighbor is. In a sense, it was fun to see Mt Fuji in the fog rain.RAINBOW WRITING, Inc. - by Karen Peralta, copy editor, ghost writer and book author - EXPERT FREE DOWNLOAD COMPUTER SET PROGRAM! We also provide professional independent and inexpensive contract in writing, editing, copying and writing, rewriting, ghost writing, graphics design and CAD, Inteet marketing, publishing assistance, the search engine optimization, professional free services and supercheap dedicated web hosting and website development services.
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