Thursday, October 10, 2013

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets Biography

Source(Gogle.com.pk)


How my poetry started

I am an 18-year-old male who lives in a suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota.  I started writing poetry in spring of 1997 but there were only a few poems intermixed in some love letters I wrote to a girl I had a crush on.  I stopped writing for many months but then got started in again on it in early 1998.  I was in English class and was asked to write a conceit; for that assignment I wrote Your Love, Your Cup of Hot Chocolate.  I received some positive feedback and after that I started writing more often.  I carry a little notebook around with me in which I write all my poems.  I find it a soothing activity for my soul and have been known to write at almost anytime of the day or night.

In May of 1998 I showed the book to a couple of my closest friends and they thought that the poetry was good so I thought I would post it on a web site and see what the rest of the world thought.  WOW.  The response has been very overwhelming for me; I receive about 30 emails per day from visitors to my site and many have written me telling me that my poetry touched them, restored their faith in the male heart, patched a relationship, told a love how much they cared, brought tears to their eyes or just a feeling that they were not alone.  I feel really good knowing that my poetry has made an impact on someone's life.

More about me

As I said before, I'm 18 and live in a suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota.  I work for a local IT firm designing web sites for the State of Minnesota and many large and small companies.  I even have my own office!  I work full-time and attend college classes on a part time basis.  I have been politically active, sitting on a state commission for my political party and have worked on numerous political campaigns.

The women in my poems

The thoughts and emotions that show through my poetry are mostly from real life experiences, however, I typically will elaborate on those experiences and emotions so that I get more powerful poems.  The reality of my life isn't quite as nice as the one I write about sometimes.  I have had several loves in my life during the past few years and have had a broken heart each time.  I also have had several women I've wanted but could not have for one reason or another.  Loss of love and sadness are apparent in many of my poems since the depressing parts of love seem to last longer than the happy parts.  I'm sure you can relate.  I also find that most of my poetry is written when I am depressed, which I hear is typical among many poets.   Every couple months a new woman comes into my life and I get a little excited but then it quickly subsides and I move on to the next.  My actual luck with relationships is pretty bad.  I have just recently met this new woman who utterly fascinates me in every way.  I want to get to know her more but at the same time I worry about becoming entangled in another relationship.  I've been hurt so many times that I wonder if next time I will not only lose my love but my sanity as well.

I have a lot of very close female friends and they play a big role in keeping me together.  Without them I would be lost and I don't think they know how important their friendship has been in my life.  They are the ones that are there to pick up what's left of me after a bad breakup.  There's something about a woman that makes me putty in their hands, I'm not sure I could point out any one feature but rather I believe it is the whole package that just gets to me.  At my age I am not looking for someone to spend the rest of my life with but rather just someone to share my present thoughts, feelings and emotions with; a companion in life as opposed to a companion for life.Sara Teasdale received public admiration for her well-crafted lyrical poetry which centered on a woman's changing perspectives on beauty, love, and death. Many of Teasdale's poems chart developments in her own life, from her experiences as a sheltered young woman in St. Louis, to those as a successful yet increasingly uneasy writer in New York City, to a depressed and disillusioned person who would commit suicide in 1933. Although many later critics would not consider Teasdale a major poet, she was popular in her lifetime with both the public and critics. She won the first Columbia Poetry Prize in 1918, a prize that would later be renamed the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.

Critics found much of Teasdale's poetry to be unsophisticated but full of musical language and evocative emotion. A New York Times Book Review contributor, writing about the 1917 edition of Love Songs, asserted that "Miss Teasdale is first, last, and always a singer." Reviewing the 1915 volume Rivers to the Sea, another New York Times Book Review contributor deemed the book "a little volume of joyous and unstudied song."

Teasdale's work in the 1926 book Dark of the Moon demonstrates her sensitivity to language, according to New York Times Book Review contributor Percy A. Hutchison. Hutchison praised "the exquisite refinement of Sara Teasdale's lyric poetry," which "shows how near Sara Teasdale can come to art's ultimate goals." Marguerite Wilkinson, writing in the New York Times Book Review and Magazine, commented on Teasdale's poetic development in 1920's Flame and Shadow, noting that "Sara Teasdale has found a philosophy of life and death," having "grown intellectually since the publication of her earlier books" and displaying a "growth in artistry." Wilkinson concluded that Flame and Shadow "is a book to read with reverence of joy."

Saturday Review of Literature contributor Louis Untermeyer, reviewing Strange Victory shortly after the poet's death, also commented on Teasdale's development. Untermeyer insisted that Strange Victory "must be ranked among her significant works," that its "beauty is in the restraint" of its "ever-present though never elaborated theme." Reviewing the 1984 collection Mirror of the Heart: Poems of Sara Teasdale, Choice contributor J. Overmyer voiced similar opinions of Teasdale's poetry, as its "simply stated thoughts are complex . . . and reverberate in the mind."
CAREER

Poet. Potter's Wheel magazine, St. Louis, MO, writer and publisher, beginning c. 1904. Sometimes published under the pseudonym Frances Trevor.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Sonnets to Duse and Other Poems, Poet Lore (Boston, MA), 1907.
Helen of Troy and Other Poems, Putnam's (New York City), 1911, revised edition, 1922.
Rivers to the Sea, Macmillan (New York City), 1915.
Love Songs, Macmillan, 1917, new edition with photographs by Eric Bauer, Macmillan, 1975.
(Editor) The Answering Voice: One Hundred Love Lyrics by Women, Houghton (Boston, MA), 1917, enlarged edition, Macmillan, 1928, new edition with additional poems published as The Answering Voice: Love Lyrics by Women, Books for Libraries Press (Freeport, NY), 1971.
Vignettes of Italy: A Cycle of Nine Songs for High Voice, 1919.
Flame and Shadow, Macmillan, 1920, revised edition published by Cape (London, England), 1924.
(Editor) Rainbow Gold: Poems Old and New for Boys and Girls, illustrations by Dugald Stewart Walker, Macmillan, 1922.
Dark of the Moon, Macmillan, 1926.
Stars To-Night: Verses New and Old for Boys and Girls, Macmillan, 1930.
A Country House, drawings by Herbert F. Roese, Knopf (New York City), 1932.
Strange Victory, Macmillan, 1933.
The Collected Poems of Sara Teasdale (also known as Collected Poems), Macmillan, 1937.
Those Who Love, Love Poems, edited by Arthur Wortman, illustrated by Bill Greer, Hallmark Editions (Kansas City, MO), 1969.
Mirror of the Heart: Poems of Sara Teasdale, edited by William Drake, Macmillan, 1984.
Christmas Carol, pictures by Dale Gottlieb, Holt (New York City), 1993.
Contributor to books, including New Voices, by Marguerite Wilkinson, Macmillan, 1936. Contributor to periodicals, including Little Review, Mirror, Poetry, Potter's Wheel, and Smart Set. Teasdale's poems have been recorded on audio cassette and released as Poems of Sara Teasdale, Su

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English


Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English

Love Poets in Urdu SMS in Urdu Pics by Wasi Shah Wallpapers About Love on Facebook in English


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