Over the Himalayas (October 2016)

Over the Himalayas (October 2016)
Over the Himalayas (October 2016) - “Sunlight streamed through grumbling storm clouds that played like tiger kittens around the mountain ridges.” ― Jane Wilson-Howarth, A Glimpse of Eternal Snows: A Journey of Love and Loss in the Himalayas

dimanche 1 août 2010

The 'Diamante' poems..

Infinity,
Dizzy, mysterious, cosmic
Puzzles, dazzles, questions
Time, space, love, soul
Splits, frees, burdens, concludes
Irrevocable, fixed, dark
Ending



Passion
Sensuous, bright, thoughtful
Burning, raising, revealing
Desire, thrill, nothingness, tears
Hurting, bleeding, cutting
Unenlighted, careless
Coldness



La multitude
Bruyante, agitée
Mélange, tourbillone, absorbe
Le flot, l'essaim, la distance, l'exil
Etouffe, libère, questionne, écoute
La silencieuse, vide
Solitude

(Multitude
Noisy, hectic
Mixing, absorbing, twirling
Streem, swarm, distance, exile
Suffocates, frees, questions, listens to
The empty, silent
Solitude)


Inspired by 'The Diamante poem' form:


The Diamante poem is arranged in a diamond pattern using seven lines in the following manner:


Line 1: noun  (noun, the opposite of line 7)
Line 2: adjective, adjective (2 adjectives describing line 1)
Line 3: verb, verb, verb ( 3 verbs relating to line 1)
Line 4: noun, noun, noun (2 nouns about line 1 and 2 nouns about line 7)
Line5: verb, verb, verb (3 verbs realting to line 7)
Line 6: adjective, adjective (2 adjectives describing line 7)
Line 7: noun (noun, the opposite of line 1)

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