Showing posts with label Poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poems. Show all posts

Short Forgive Me Poems | Apologize To Someone Love

Here are short poems about forgive me and love. These forgiveness poems help you to ask for their forgiveness. Don't late, explore forgive me poems

forgive-me-poems
Short Forgive Me Poem

You Really Cannot Trust
You really can't trust the person, who hurt you,
You really can't change things around,
The feelings are gone,
As there is no serenity around,
So let us end this topic here,
So that there will be no fear,
Of losing you,
Please forgive me!

I'm-sorry-poem
Forgive Me Poem

When I say
I am sorry when I say
I also mean a lot
It is from my heart my dear,
My only genuine thought,
Let go of things of past,
Because love is too vast,
I am sorry
Please forgive me!

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Life is such
The situation was such,
Please understand,
I did not want to hurt you
I did not want to make you feel so blue,
Please let go of things again,
Please forgive me,
Bring back my lost glee!
Sorry!

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I feel so broken without you
I feel so broken without you in my life
I feel so helpless within
Life without you is not the same
And I don't know whom to blame
One mistake and you did not trust me
One mistake and things got so ugly
I know that I cannot go and correct everything
I know that it is not possible this way
But leave everything behind and give me a say
As without you, life is lifeless and dull
Please help me and have my say
Please forgive me I am sorry!

-----------------

Sorry is the word
Sorry this word has so many emotions,
It also has a cure,
When someone forgives,
Then you can be sure,
That your life is back on track,
Please forgive me dear,
Bring back my lost cheer,
I am sorry!

-----------------


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Top Religious Christmas Poems for All Ages

Here are Short Religious Christmas Poems, Best Christmas Poems, Moving Festive Verses and some Christmas Poems for Kids, all perfect for reading by the fire over the festive season.

religious-christmas-poems
Religious Christmas Poems


Help Wanted

Timothy Tocher


Santa needs new reindeer.

The first bunch has grown old.

Dasher has arthritis;

Comet hates the cold.

Prancer's sick of staring

at Dancer's big behind.

Cupid married Blitzen

and Donder lost his mind.

Dancer's mad at Vixen

for stepping on his toes.

Vixen's being thrown out-

she laughed at Rudolph's nose.

If you are a reindeer

we hope you will apply.

There is just one tricky part:

You must know how to fly.

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short-christmas-poems
Short Christmas Poems


In the Bleak Midwinter

Christina Rossetti

In the bleak midwinter, frosty wind made moan,

Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone;

Snow had fallen, snow on snow, snow on snow,

In the bleak midwinter, long ago.


Our God, Heaven cannot hold Him, nor earth sustain;

Heaven and earth shall flee away when He comes to reign.

In the bleak midwinter a stable place sufficed

The Lord God Almighty, Jesus Christ


Enough for Him, whom cherubim, worship night and day,

Breastful of milk, and a mangerful of hay;

Enough for Him, whom angels fall before,

The ox and ass and camel which adore.


Angels and archangels may have gathered there,

Cherubim and seraphim thronged the air;

But His mother only, in her maiden bliss,

Worshipped the beloved with a kiss.


What can I give Him, poor as I am?

If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb;

If I were a Wise Man, I would do my part;

Yet what I can I give Him: give my heart.

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The First Christmas

Marian Swinger


It never snows at Christmas in that dry and dusty land.

Instead of freezing blizzards, there are palms and drifting sands,

and years ago a stable and a most unusual star

and three wise men who followed it, by camel, not by car,

while, sleepy on the quiet hills, a shepherd gave a cry.

He'd seen a crowd of angels in the silent starlit sky.

In the stable, ox and ass stood very still and calm

and gazed upon the baby, safe and snug in Mary's arms.

And Joseph, lost in shadows, face lit by an oil lamp's glow

stood wondering, that first Christmas Day, two thousand years ago

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On the thirteenth day of Christmas my true love phoned me up . . . 

Dave Calder  


Well, I suppose I should be grateful, you’ve obviously gone

to a lot of trouble and expense – or maybe off your head.

Yes, I did like the birds – the small ones anyway were fun

if rather messy, but now the hens have roosted on my bed

and the rest are nested on the wardrobe. It’s hard to sleep

with all that cooing, let alone the cackling of the geese

whose eggs are everywhere, but mostly in a broken smelly heap

on the sofa. No, why should I mind? I can’t get any peace

anywhere – the lounge is full of drummers thumping tom-toms

and sprawling lords crashed out from manic leaping. The

kitchen is crammed with cows and milkmaids and smells of a million stink-bombs

and enough sour milk to last a year. The pipers? I’d forgotten them –

they were no trouble, I paid them and they went. But I can’t get rid

of these young ladies. They won’t stop dancing or turn the music down

and they’re always in the bathroom, squealing as they skid

across the flooded floor. No, I don’t need a plumber round,

it’s just the swans – where else can they swim? Poor things,

I think they’re going mad, like me. When I went to wash my

hands one ate the soap, another swallowed the gold rings.

And the pear tree died. Too dry. So thanks for nothing,

   love. Goodbye.

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The Crying Need for Snow

Clive James


It’s cold without the softness of a fall

Of snow to give these scenes a common bond

And though, besotted on a viewless rime,

The ducks can do their standing-on-the-pond

Routine that leaves you howling, all in all

We need some snow to hush the whole thing up.


The ducks can do their flatfoot-waterfool

Mad act that leaves you helpless, but in fine

We need their footprints in a higher field

Made pure powder, need their wig-wag line

Of little kites pressed in around the pool:

An afternoon of snow should cover that.


Some crystalline precipitate should throw

Its multifarious weightlessness around

For half a day and paint the whole place out,

Bring back a soft regime to bitter ground:

An instant plebiscite would vote for snow

So overwhelmingly if we could call it now.


An afternoon of snow should cover that

Milk-bottle neck bolt upright in the slime

Fast frozen at the pond’s edge, brutal there:

We need to see junk muffled, whitewashed grime,

Lean brittle ice grown comfortably fat,

A world prepared to take our footprints in.


A world prepared to take our footprints in

Needs painting out, needs be a finer field:

So overwhelmingly, if we could call it now,

The fluffy stuff would prime it: it would yield

To lightest step, be webbed and toed and heeled,

Pushed flat, smoothed off, heaped high, pinched anyhow,

Yet be inviolable. Put like that,

Gently, the cold makes sense. Snow links things up.

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Read More Best: Christmas Poems



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Best Examples of Confessional Poetry | Confessional Poems

Confessional poetry or "Confessionalism" is a style of poetry that emerged in the United States during the late 1950s and early 1960s. It is sometimes also classified as a form of Postmodernism. Read More about Confessional Poetry


Examples Confessional Poetry
Confessional Poetry Example

The Fury Of Sunsets


Something

cold is in the air,

an aura of ice

and phlegm.

All day I’ve built

a lifetime and now

the sun sinks to

undo it.

The horizon bleeds

and sucks its thumb.

The little red thumb

goes out of sight.

And I wonder about

this lifetime with myself,

this dream I’m living.

I could eat the sky

like an apple

but I’d rather

ask the first star:

why am I here?

why do I live in this house?

who’s responsible?

eh?


-----------------


Barefoot


Loving me with my shoes off

means loving my long brown legs,

sweet dears, as good as spoons;

and my feet, those two children

let out to play naked. Intricate nubs,

my toes. No longer bound.

And what’s more, see toenails and

all ten stages, root by root.

All spirited and wild, this little

piggy went to market and this little piggy

stayed. Long brown legs and long brown toes.

Further up, my darling, the woman

is calling her secrets, little houses,

little tongues that tell you.


There is no one else but us

in this house on the land spit.

The sea wears a bell in its navel.

And I’m your barefoot wench for a

whole week. Do you care for salami?

No. You’d rather not have a scotch?

No. You don’t really drink. You do

drink me. The gulls kill fish,

crying out like three-year-olds.

The surf’s a narcotic, calling out,

I am, I am, I am

all night long. Barefoot,

I drum up and down your back.

In the morning I run from door to door

of the cabin playing chase me.

Now you grab me by the ankles.

Now you work your way up the legs

and come to pierce me at my hunger mark.


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Red Roses


Tommy is three and when he’s bad

his mother dances with him.

She puts on the record,

“Red Roses for a Blue Lady”

and throws him across the room.

Mind you,

she never laid a hand on him.

He gets red roses in different places,

the head, that time he was as sleepy as a river,

the back, that time he was a broken scarecrow,

the arm like a diamond had bitten it,

the leg, twisted like a licorice stick,

all the dance they did together,

Blue Lady and Tommy.

You fell, she said, just remember you fell.

I fell, is all he told the doctors

in the big hospital. A nice lady came

and asked him questions but because

he didn’t want to be sent away he said, I fell.

He never said anything else although he could talk fine.

He never told about the music

or how she’d sing and shout

holding him up and throwing him.


He pretends he is her ball.

He tries to fold up and bounce

but he squashes like fruit.

For he loves Blue Lady and the spots

of red roses he gives her.

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Read More: Confessional Poetry Examples

Short Halloween Poems That Rhyme

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Repetition Words in Poems | Best Examples

Repetition mean repetition words in poetry. Repetition is used to bring a reader's attention to specific ideas or themes in the poem. We collect some poems which best describe repetition words.


Poems with repetition words
Poems with repetition words
 

I Love Your Smile

- Ronald Doe


I love your eyes and your soft sighs.

I love your inner beauty, too.

I love the way each passing day

You give a love so warm and true.


I love your clothes, your turned-up nose,

The way your precious kisses taste,

But most of all, my living doll,

I love the smile upon your face.


I love your lips and slender hips.

I love the giggle in your talk.

I love your class and your sweet sass,

The wiggle in your sexy walk.


I love your shrug and your warm hug,

Love your tender and warm embrace.

But most of all, my living doll,

I love the smile upon your face.


I love your look, the way you cook.

I love your heart, your soul and mind.

I love the way you laugh and play,

How you always treat me so kind.


I love the fact you are intact.

I love your style, charm and grace,

But most of all, my living doll,

I love the smile upon your face.


I love your charms, your loving arms,

How you hold me so tenderly.

I love the bliss, the happiness

When you're making sweet love to me.


I love when you get naughty, too

And kiss me all over the place,

But most of all, my living doll,

I love the smile upon your face.


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One Art

- Elizabeth Bishop


The art of losing isn’t hard to master;

so many things seem filled with the intent

to be lost that their loss is no disaster.


Lose something every day. Accept the fluster

of lost door keys, the hour badly spent.

The art of losing isn’t hard to master.


Then practice losing farther, losing faster:

places, and names, and where it was you meant

to travel. None of these will bring disaster.


I lost my mother’s watch. And look! my last, or

next-to-last, of three loved houses went.

The art of losing isn’t hard to master.


I lost two cities, lovely ones. And, vaster,

some realms I owned, two rivers, a continent.

I miss them, but it wasn’t a disaster.


—Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture

I love) I shan’t have lied. It’s evident

the art of losing’s not too hard to master

though it may look like (Write it!) like disaster.


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Cool It Down

- Abimbola T. Alabi


You're not so important

That you can't be replaced.

If you leave today,

Someone will fill your space;

Cool it down.


You're not that mighty

That you cannot fall.

Sometimes what will make you trip

Is something really small;

Cool it down.


You're not that wise

To justly give into pride.

You can learn useful lessons,

Sometimes from a little child;

Cool it down.


You're not that excellent

By earning other's applause.

Same folks that shout your praise

Can still point out your flaws;

Cool it down.


Don't get so confident

To presume you're the only one.

Should you die today,

Life will simply go on;

Cool it down.


How to write repetition poems

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Unheard Voice

- Littin Thomas Modoor


Nine months are slowly getting close,

I am surrounded by the blanket of yours;

Slowly I am growing in your womb,

Please don't send me to the tomb;

Oh mother, can't you hear my voice?

Don't you have another choice?


Aren't you happy? You can see me soon,

I am excited to see the world of sun and moon;

In your womb, I am counting days,

To show you mother, my little gaze;

Oh mother, can't you hear my voice?

Don't you have another choice?


Mother, I am excited for my first toy,

I promise I will become your joy;

Please don't feel me as a burden,

Whatever you decide cannot be undone;

Oh mother, can't you hear my voice?

Don't you have another choice?


I know you are waiting to see me play,

More than you I am excited to see that day;

Oh mother, won't you start my life story,

Please don't make my life a history;

Oh mother, can't you hear my voice?

Don't you have another choice?


I am excited to play in your lap,

With my deeds, I will make you clap;

Oh mother, give me a chance to live,

Even if you don't, I will forgive;

Oh mother, my life is now a question,

Please don't give it name of abortion.

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Read More: Repetition Poems Examples

Best Examples of Hyperbole Poems

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Best Examples of Hyperbole Poems | Hyperbole Poetry

What is Hyperbole?

A hyperbole is an extreme exaggeration. People sometimes use exaggeration in to make others understandable that they are very hungry. Read More about Hyperbole

 

As I Walked Out One Evening

W.H. Auden was an English-American poet who often used hyperbole. In his poem, "As I Walked Out One Evening," Auden’s expressing his everlasting love and, although China and Africa are as likely to touch borders as America and Australia, the exaggeration says it all.:


"I'll love you, dear, I'll love you

Till China and Africa meet,

And the river jumps over the mountain

And the salmon sing in the street."


Examples of Hyperbole Poems
Examples of Hyperbole Poems 


I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud

William Wordsworth is reflecting upon a long row of daffodils he saw in "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud." Although they were plentiful and beautiful, it’s unlikely they were quite as expansive as the milky way:


Continuous as the stars that shine

And twinkle on the milky way,

They stretched in a never-ending line

Along the margin of a bay:

Ten thousand I saw at a glance,

Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.


My Heart Beats for You

Hyperbole is frequently utilized in the context of romantic love, as is the case with this short poem by LoveToKnow's Kelly Roper. Consider the beating heart of passion:


One thousand stampeding bison thundering across the plains

Couldn't drown out the sound of my heart beating for you.

Its rhythm feeds the greatest symphony ever known to man,

Yet such life-transforming love is experienced by so few.


The Tantrum Felt Round the World

Also by Kelly Roper, this poem will resonate with many frustrated parents dealing with a child refused another scoop of ice cream. It's figuratively the end of the world:


When little Janie's mother told her, "No more ice cream,"

Janie's face turned red, and her ears began to steam.

Her body trembled harder than a huge earthquake,

And when she opened up her mouth, let there be no mistake,

She let out the most terrifying, awful shrieking scream,

The likes of which a million banshees only dared to dream.

The vibrations from this tantrum could be felt across the ground,

They shook the entire U.S. and then they traveled the whole world round.

Her hellish scream traveled on the winds to places far and wide,

And no one could escape it; there was nowhere they could hide.

But Janie's mother wasn't impressed with this kind of behavior.

She grounded Janie for three weeks and refused to relent or waiver.


The Concord Hymn

Have you ever heard the expression, “The shot heard ‘round the world?" It’s a hyperbole that refers to the beginning of the American Revolution. Although the shot wasn’t heard on the other side of the globe, those who were in its near presence understood its gravity. It comes from a poem written by Ralph Waldo Emerson called "The Concord Hymn:"


Here once the embattled farmers stood

And fired the shot heard round the world.


Read More:  Hyperbole Poems

Repetition Words Poems

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