special issue
Tsunami as History
by LYN LIFSHIN
POETRYREPAIRS v12.02:014
Contemporary International Poetry - TSUNAMI AS HISTORY by LYN LIFSHIN, for your reading pleasure,
poetry from new and established poets and essays on writing


All the fine arts are species of poetry--Samuel Taylor Coleridge


Waves and Birds, circa 1825
Waves and Birds,...
Katsushika ...
Buy This at Allposters.com


for mature audience over 18 BACK
THE MOST FAMOUS STATUE IN JAPAN AFTER THE KOBE EARTHQUAKE  
POETRY requires a mature audience ENTER only if you are 18+ under 18? klik here
WHEN THE MEN

of Kukoshima Perfecture
were wrapped in white
anticontamiation suits, 

THE MOST FAMOUS STATUE

in Japan is probably
one of a dog, Hachiko
who exemplified 
loyalty, perseverance
and duty, the dog met 
his owner at the station
when he returned each day.
But the owner died at 
work one day in 1925 
and never returned.
Until he died about ten
years later the dog 
faithfully went to the
train station each after
noon in case is master
returned.		
POETRYREPAIRS 12.02:014
link to poetryrepairs
I have many things to write unto you but   I will not write with pen and ink
--JOHN the theologian



Japanese Garden II
Japanese Garden...

Buy This at Allposters.com

FIND home

THE MOST FAMOUS STATUE IN JAPAN AFTER THE KOBE EARTHQUAKE  
POETRY requires a mature audience ENTER only if you are 18+ under 18? klik here

IN JAPAN
for a birthday party one American invited his class mates over and taught them to play musical chairs. The children, especially the girls, were traumatized y having to push aside others to gain a seat for themselves. what unfolded may have been the most polite, most apologetic, and least competitive game of musical chairs in the history of the world
POETRYREPAIRS 12.02: 014
Poetry endangers the established order  of the soul - Plato



Japon
Japon
Bruno Pozzo
Buy This at Allposters.com


guidelines INDEX
THE MOST FAMOUS STATUE IN JAPAN AFTER THE KOBE EARTHQUAKE  
POETRY requires a mature audience ENTER only if you are 18+ under 18? klik here




AFTER THE KOBE EARTHQUAKE

in 1955 that killed more than 6000 people and no one could find an example of looting from any shops with broken windows. only one homeowner was missing two bike's . Later they found they were taken for rescue efforts
POETRYREPAIRS 12.02: 014
special issue
Tsunami as History
by LYN LIFSHIN

Not a state organ: POETRYREPAIRS accepts no monies from federal, state, or local governments. We relie on readers like you.
reader donations keep POETRYREPAIRS online
free counters
NAVIGATION for mature audience over 18
BACK | comments + feedback on FACEBOOK | FIND| guidelines | home INDEX | LinkedIn® professional networking services |

submit editor@[sitename]
<