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TIFFANIE JONES
I want you			

But I haven't been able to capture you completely
I've never wanted to be with someone as much as
I wanted to be with you
You have that kind of love that just moves me in a way
I've never felt before
How do I know?
Because I've felt it from you
I had your love once
But I let it go
I don't know why
But now I want it back
How can I get it?
What must I do?
Why haven't you realized my love for you?
Maybe you have but
Our friendship is even more
Why is it that we always want
Te thing we cannot have?
Maybe because we haven't realized that
We already have them
Just not in the way we want them.

---copyright TIFFANIE JONES

REPAIR: Concourse or confluence of people at or in a place; resort, frequent or habitual going; making one's way; to arrive; to dwell; to heal, to cure, to recover; to renew; (AND!) to fix to original condition. Oxford English Dictionary
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."
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STEVE GILLMAN
How to Write Poetry

If you want to know how to write poetry, the first thing you have to do is write some. It doesn't matter how it turns out. Your own mistakes will become your teachers. Your own writing will motivate you to greater creativity. Now, once you start the process, how do you improve it? Here are three tips.

1. Use nouns and verbs more than adjectives. Which is stronger: "She was as beautiful as a flower..." or "Roses wilted in shame as she passed by..."? "He looked at the depressing clouds..." or "He watched as dark clouds moved in, covering his sky..."?

2. Don't tell the reader how to feel. Let the words elicit the emotions directly, without explaining. "The tragedy touched them all," is more touching to the reader as "Men and women, doctor and workman... thirteen people looked upon the scene... with tears in their eyes."

3. Use dramatic and emotional words. Not all words are equal in their ability to "grab" a reader or elicit emotion. "Fell," "take," and "love," will probably be weaker than "plunged," "siezed," and "worship."

Look at the following lines, written two ways. The second way applies the three rules above. (From the poem "Gratitude.")

1.
The mountains and lakes were beautiful
I looked at them, heard them and smelled them
And I felt in awe

2.
Mountains stand against the sky
My little lake at their feet
And in the middle of this creation
Which I see with my eyes
Hear with my ears
Smell and taste...
Words fail, as they should

I hope you agree that the second version is better. Again, if you want to know how to write poetry, you have to start writing. Use these and other rules to help you, but remember that all rules in poetry need to be broken at times. Read your poems aloud to yourself and others as a final "test."

---STEVE GILLMAN---
has been playing with poetry for thirty years. He and his wife Ana created the game Deal-A-Poem, which can be accessed for free at: http://www.dealapoem.com

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RIC MASTEN
A Farm Accident
A Farm Accident the horses shied and then wild-eyed bolted from the field racing back toward the barn traces flying the mower still attached and running close behind your father shouting an alarm as that ugly snapping arm reached out taking everything off at the ankle weeds and corn and hollyhock and then in slow motion sweeping through the stems of two small boys frozen in surprise and sometime later in a photograph we find those grinning little peg-legged Petes proud as punch posing though the color and shape are exactly right an artificial limb is what it is and can be put on and taken off but the story that comes with it walks and walks and walks

--- copyright RIC MASTEN ---

'A Farm Accident' previously published on poetryREpairs 01.01:003

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