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The Art of Poetry

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Art of Poetry craft truth into rhythm. Find your voice, master imagery and form, write bravely, revise sharply, and turn life into lines that last.

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Amy Lynn's Poetry Corner

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2 contributions to The Write Way
Does anyone else measure the sylables in their poetry?
When I write poems I try to make sure the lines have a symitry of timing and pace by counting out the sylables to make sure this happens. I am not saying my lines never varry in a poem I am writing but I always try to make some sort of pattern that I feel lends to the timing, tempo, pace and general good feeling of the poem. I often put the count on the lines to make sure they match other lines in a patern as in: 7 7 8 8 7 7 Is this a quark that anyone else does. I think it might be due to the obsesive compulsiveness I have always had in my head. I used to count the number of steps to the bus stop when I was a kid. What quarks do you have in your poetry?
1 like • 2d
Yes, and i hate that i do that LOL
1 like • 1d
@Zane Dowling not when you catch yourself doing it when writing a free verse poem LoL
Are you a poet?
I'd like to hear about your poetic journey. You can talk about or post any poem to solicit feedback, if you want. I'll start with one of mine called "The Fall" Note: For the record I only use the pronoun "He" to reference God because it is the public norm. I truly believe and understand that God is gender neutral (after all he has created all of them). If you like you can replace "He" with whatever pronoun you prefer as you read the poem. The Fall By Zane D. Dowling I saw a leaf fall to the ground one cold forbidding winter’s day. This death so slight yet so profound, Brought pause to think on life this way: How quick and frail this life I see, If once this leaf in time must fall. How long ere when this leaf is me; till life doth yield to death’s harsh call. But with more thought I understand the mysteries of this cold world, I cannot know as mortal man such things till life's flag's unfurled. So I travel through God's love song And when I fall, for sure I must, as each of us must do ere long I’ve faith in He who’s made me thus. I'll sing His praises all my days, and submit to Him all my ways. .
2 likes • 2d
Yes Im a poet this poem just recently won 3rd place out of 150 entries in the Diamond Quill Poetry Contest The Wounded Soul A touch, a word, a fleeting glance, A whispered hope, a second chance. The way we treat the ones in pain Can mend the soul or leave a stain. A child who cries in silent fear, A wound ignored, unseen, yet near. A gentle hand, a kind embrace, Can turn the darkness into grace. The doctor mends, the healer sighs, A patient pleads with weary eyes. A single dose, a bandage tight, Yet kindness proves the true respite. For scars are more than flesh and bone, Some linger deep, some stand alone. And how we treat the broken hearts Determines if the healing starts. A sentence laced with bitter steel, Can cut as deep as blades that kill. A careless jest, a sharp critique, Can shake the strong and wound the weak. Yet words, when placed with love and care, Can lift despair from weighted air. A compliment, a simple cheer, Can wipe away the silent tear. How do we treat the ones we meet? With words like daggers, cold and fleet? Or do we gift them warmth and light, And guide them gently through the night? The way we treat the weak and small, Defines the height from which we fall. The beggar left without a name, The outcast bathed in silent shame. A world that turns from pleading eyes, Will find itself where mercy dies. Yet justice, when it stands alone, Is nothing but a heart of stone. To treat with fairness is to blend The hand of law with love’s amend. For punishment with no reprieve Leaves hollow hearts that can’t believe. A second chance, a moment spared, Might show the world someone still cares. And in that light, in fate’s own hand, A shattered soul may learn to stand. The Treatment We Give Ourselves But what of how we treat our skin, Our weary bones, the soul within? Do we demand, yet never rest, And wear our burdens like a vest? The mirror shows a tale unkind, Reflections shaped by judging mind. We speak to self with cruel disdain,
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Jason Strickland
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@jason-strickland-2187
Author. Publisher. Community builder. Founder of The Art of Poetry Community, helping poets turn words into legacy.

Active 4h ago
Joined Apr 21, 2026
Seattle,Washington