There are thousands of poetry websites available. With the 21st century, publishing has radically changed, and hundreds of small presses, poetry blogs, and forums are popping up on regular basis.
I'm posting a list below of poetry forums, blogs, and publishers for you to check out.
SMALL PRESSES
UndergroundBooks
http://www.undergroundbooks.org/
Empty Mirror
http://www.emptymirrorbooks.com
Dead Beats
http://www.deadbeats.eu
W.I.S.H. Publishing
http://www.walkingishonestpoetrypress.wordpress.com
Mad Swirl
http://madswirlspoetryforum.blogspot.com
POETRY BLOGS
Gatsby's Abandoned Children
http://www.jeremiahwaltonnostroviapoetry.wordpress.com/
Best New Poets
http://bestnewpoets.org/blog/
Unlikely Blond
http://unlikelyblond.wordpress.com/blog/
Nostrovia! Poetry
http://www.nostroviawriting.wordpress.com/
POETRY FORUMS
Unlikely Blond Poetry Forum
http://unlikelyblond.com/unlikelyblond/ubpoetry/
r/Poetry
http://www.reddit.com/r/poetry
Writer's Cafe
http://www.writerscafe.org/
from which site can take out the poem
this web site dose not work this web site dose not work
The poem "Never Bite A Married Woman On The Thigh" by Shel Silverstein can be found on the Squdoo site (See links below).
The Iliad
The poem is still in copyright; wikianswers rules means I can't answer that. Could you please let me know on my message board of a site that I could view it on?
i cant realy help u but look on this site it'll show you the real poem http://www.teachersfirst.com/share/highwayman/st1.html plus i need help on a friends acrostic poem any ideas?
Yes; but it is copyrighted. Jay Fisher wrote a poem to describe the theme of one of the daggers he made and you can find it on his site. You should be able to find it in the daggers, stands/cases, museum pieces sections. I forgot exactly where its at as his site is quite massive.
"Kubla Khan" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge is a famous poem inspired by a dream. It describes a fantastical palace built by the Mongol ruler Kubla Khan. The poem explores themes of creativity, nature, and the power of the imagination.
The Steinbeck poem in "Cannery Row" is called "Sea of Cortez." It reflects on the beauty and mystery of marine life and the interconnectedness of all living things.
tang ina nyo mga gago walang kwentang site 2 mga gago
I just looked up the definition of "Villanelle" in the Wikipedia; I suggest you do the same (or in some other reference site). There is nothing in the definition I read that suggest that this kind of poem has to be evil.
In Stanza 5 of the poem, the word "grave" could be interpreted as both a burial site and as serious or solemn. This dual meaning adds depth to the poem by suggesting a connection between death and the seriousness of the speaker's emotions.