Advertisement
rhyme with cold: The Cold Moon Jeffery Deaver, 2006-05-30 Rhyme convinces Sachs to help him look for a serial killer even though she is now working a murder investigation of her own. |
rhyme with cold: The Cold Moon Jeffery Deaver, 2009-06-16 In the aftermath of two brutal New York City murders, quadriplegic detective Lincoln Rhyme and his team work doggedly to prevent additional killings by a time-obsessed serial murderer. |
rhyme with cold: Phonemic Awareness and Beginning Phonics, Ages 3 - 6 , 2012-10-22 The activities in these rich theme-based resources develop phonemic awareness through phoneme isolation, rhyming, identity, categorization, blending, segmentation, deletion, addition, and substitution. Includes initial and final skill assessments, along with detailed instructions for administering and evaluating the assessments. |
rhyme with cold: Cold Tim McCanna, 2024-11-05 This lyrical environmental picture book introduces readers to some of the most beautiful and fascinating cold climate creatures and habitats all over the world. Cold is a morning dappled in dew; an ocean, swirling and deep; a desert shrouded by night; and tiny tracks on hills of snow. No matter where or how, life finds a way even in the coldest weather. From an octopus to an arctic hare, meet animals who thrive in chilly environments and learn about the climate phenomena that shape their homes. |
rhyme with cold: Rhyme and Meaning in the Poetry of Yeats Marjorie Perloff, 2019-03-18 No detailed description available for Rhyme and Meaning in the Poetry of Yeats. |
rhyme with cold: Reading Poetry Tom Furniss, Michael Bath, 2022-04-06 Reading Poetry offers a comprehensive and accessible guide to the art of reading poetry. Discussing more than 200 poems by more than 100 writers, ranging from ancient Greece and China to the twenty-first century, the book introduces readers to the skills and the critical and theoretical awareness that enable them to read poetry with enjoyment and insight. This third edition has been significantly updated in response to current developments in poetry and poetic criticism, and includes many new examples and exercises, new chapters on ‘world poetry’ and ‘eco-poetry’, and a greater emphasis throughout on American poetry, including the impact traditional Chinese poetry has had on modern American poetry. The seventeen carefully staged chapters constitute a complete apprenticeship in reading poetry, leading readers from specific features of form and figurative language to larger concerns with genre, intertextuality, Caribbean poetry, world poetry, and the role poetry can play in response to the ecological crisis. The workshop exercises at the end of each chapter, together with an extensive glossary of poetic and critical terms, and the number and range of poems analysed and discussed – 122 of which are quoted in full – make Reading Poetry suitable for individual study or as a comprehensive, self-contained textbook for university and college classes. |
rhyme with cold: Pursuing Privacy in Cold War America Deborah Nelson, 2001-12-26 Pursuing Privacy in Cold War America explores the relationship between confessional poetry and constitutional privacy doctrine, both of which emerged at the end of the 1950s. While the public declarations of the Supreme Court and the private declamations of the lyric poet may seem unrelated, both express the upheavals in American notions of privacy that marked the Cold War era. Nelson situates the poetry and legal decisions as part of a far wider anxiety about privacy that erupted across the social, cultural, and political spectrum during this period. She explores the panic over the death of privacy aroused by broad changes in postwar culture: the growth of suburbia, the advent of television, the popularity of psychoanalysis, the arrival of computer databases, and the spectacles of confession associated with McCarthyism. Examining this interchange between poetry and law at its most intense moments of reflection in the 1960s, '70s, and '80s, Deborah Nelson produces a rhetorical analysis of a privacy concept integral to postwar America's self-definition and to bedrock contradictions in Cold War ideology. Nelson argues that the desire to stabilize privacy in a constitutional right and the movement toward confession in postwar American poetry were not simply manifestations of the anxiety about privacy. Supreme Court justices and confessional poets such as Anne Sexton, Robert Lowell, W. D. Snodgrass, and Sylvia Plath were redefining the nature of privacy itself. Close reading of the poetry alongside the Supreme Court's shifting definitions of privacy in landmark decisions reveals a broader and deeper cultural metaphor at work. |
rhyme with cold: The World Is Cold But I Got The Heat On BernardSmith Jr, 2010-09-24 THIS BOOK IS FOR THE UNDERDOGS WHO DON'T HAVE THE ACCESS TO SPEAK THEIR FEELINGS TO THE WORLD, THE ONES THAT HAS DOUBTERS ABOUT THERE STRIVE TO COME Up. ALSO FOR THE TOP DOGS, THAT CAME UP AGAINST ALL ODDS, BUT YET HAS THE ENVY STEADY TRYING TO BRING THEM DOWN. THAT'S WHY I WRITE AS RAW AS I DO, TO STRESS MY POINT WORLD WIDE. |
rhyme with cold: Das Kalte Herz. The Cold Heart, from the German. (The Juvenile Englishman's Library. vol. 4.). Wilhelm Hauff, 1844 |
rhyme with cold: Cold Mountain Poems Anjiang Hu, 2023-07-28 This book unveils the legendary life and the mystic poems of the iconic Chinese Tang poet Han-shan (known by his pen name “Cold Mountain”) and investigates the dissemination and reception of the Cold Mountain Poems (CMPs) attributed to him. Han-shan and the CMPs are amongst the most legendary literary landscapes and cultural memories in the history of world scholarly exchange. The maniac poet recluse hidden in the Cold Mountains, the delicate poetic realms of Confucianism, Buddhism, Zen and Taoism contained in the Cold Mountain Poems, and the incredible pervasiveness of its text travel and canon construction worldwide, as well as the profound impact of CMPs on comparative literature, world literature and Chinese studies, provide the perfect lens to learn about Chinese language, literature, culture and society. This book is thus intended to investigate CMPs in a coherent global context. Considering the vertical studies of the Chinese literature polysystem, it highlights the horizontal influence of CMPs, literarily or non-literarily. Furthermore, it addresses the making and developing of the Han-shan phenomenon and its implications for translation studies, travel writing, canon construction and literary historiography. This book is for scholars, researchers and students in literary history and East Asian Studies focusing on Chinese literature and culture and those interested in the history of poetry in general. |
rhyme with cold: English Folk-rhymes G. F. Northall, 1892 |
rhyme with cold: The Poems and Prose Sketches of James Whitcomb Riley: Rhymes of childhood James Whitcomb Riley, 1898 |
rhyme with cold: The Poems and Prose Sketches of James Whitcomb Riley ...: Rhymes of childhood. 1898 James Whitcomb Riley, 1917 |
rhyme with cold: Children's Counting-Out Rhymes, Fingerplays, Jump-Rope and Bounce-Ball Chants and Other Rhythms Gloria T. Delamar, 2024-10-14 Do you have a childhood memory of playing with other children and jumping rope or counting to those age-old funny rhymes? This impressive compilation includes all the old traditional favorites (and some new) and is useful to anyone who works with children--parents, teachers, librarians, group leaders, camp counselors, day-care people, anyone. Infants' finger and toe-counting games, choose-up-sides and you-are-it rhymes, ball-bouncing chants, tongue twisters, staircase tales, narrative act-out singsong tales and others--children have been enthralled by these rhymes and rhythms for ages. Also included are author, title, first line, and subject indexes. |
rhyme with cold: Rhymes of Childhood James Whitcomb Riley, 1898 |
rhyme with cold: The Contemporary Leonard Cohen Kait Pinder, Joel Deshaye, 2023-11-28 The Contemporary Leonard Cohen is an exciting new study that offers an original explanation of Leonard Cohen’s staying power and his various positions in music, literature, and art. The death of Leonard Cohen received media attention across the globe, and this international star remains dear to the hearts of many fans. This book examines the diversity of Cohen’s art in the wake of his death, positioning him as a contemporary, multi-media artist whose career was framed by the twentieth-century and neoliberal contexts of its production. The authors borrow the idea of “the contemporary” especially from philosophy and art history, applying it to Cohen for the first time—not only to the drawings that he included in some of his books but also to his songs, poems, and novels. This idea helps us to understand Cohen’s techniques after his postmodern experiments with poems and novels in the 1960s and 1970s. It also helps us to see how his most recent songs, poems, and drawings developed out of that earlier material, including earlier connections to other writers and musicians. Philosophically, “the contemporary” also sounds out the deep feelings that Cohen’s work still generates in readers and listeners. Whether these feelings are spiritual or secular, sincere or ironic, we get them partly from the sense of timeliness and the sense of timelessness in Cohen’s lyrics and images, which speak to our own lives and times, our own struggles and survival. From a set of international collaborators, The Contemporary Leonard Cohen delivers an appreciative but critical examination of one of our dark luminaries. |
rhyme with cold: Rhyme's Challenge David Caplan, 2014-01-13 Rhyme's Challenge offers a concise, pithy primer to hip-hop poetics while presenting a spirited defense of rhyme in contemporary American poetry. David Caplan's stylish study examines hip-hop's central but supposedly outmoded verbal technique: rhyme. At a time when print-based poets generally dismiss formal rhyme as old-fashioned and bookish, hip-hop artists deftly deploy it as a way to capture the contemporary moment. Rhyme accommodates and colorfully chronicles the most conspicuous conditions and symbols of contemporary society: its products, technologies, and personalities. Ranging from Shakespeare and Wordsworth to Eminem and Jay-Z, David Caplan's study demonstrates the continuing relevance of rhyme to poetry -- and everyday life. |
rhyme with cold: Songwriting: Essential Guide to Rhyming Pat Pattison, 1991-11-01 (Berklee Press). This book has a very specific purpose: to help songwriters find better rhymes and use them more effectively. Rhyme is one of the most crucial areas of lyrics writing, and this guide will provide all of the technical information necessary to develop your skills completely. The exercises and worksheets help experienced writers take a fresh look at their techniques, and prevent novices from developing bad habits. Use this book to start writing better than ever before! |
rhyme with cold: The Cold Heart. Nose, the Dwarf (Two German Tales) Wilhelm Hauff, 2008-12 Wilhelm Hauff was a writer of extraordinary fancy and invention, but working for a more obvious purpose, and producing narratives more related in character to popular legends. He was born in 1802, at Stuttgard, and in early life showed a great predilection for telling childish narratives. Being designed for the theological profession, he went to the University of Tubingen in 1820. --- On leaving the university, Hauff became tutor to the children of the Wurttemberg minister of war, General Ernst Eugen Freiherr von Hugel, and for them wrote his Tales, which he published in his Almanach of Tales for the year 1826. --- Only a few of his famous tales take place in Germany, among them the Nose, the Dwarf and The Cold Heart. --- Hauff needs only to be known to become popular in any country. His works, which are somewhat numerous, were published in a complete edition by the poet Gustav Schwab, in 1830. Wilhelm Hauff died in 1827, before he had completed his twenty-sixth year. |
rhyme with cold: The Cold Counsel Sarah M. Anderson, Karen Swenson, 2013-05-13 Cold Counsel is the only collection devoted to the place of women in Old Norse literature and culture. It draws upon the disciplines of history, sociology, feminism, ethnography and psychoanalysis in order to raise fresh questions about such new subjects as gender, class, sexuality, family structure and ideology in medieval Iceland. |
rhyme with cold: Pat Pattison's Songwriting: Essential Guide to Rhyming Pat Pattison, 2014-04-01 (Berklee Press). Find better rhymes, and use them more effectively. Rhyme is one of the most crucial areas of lyric writing, and this guide will provide you with all the technical information necessary to develop your skills completely. Make rhyme work for you, and your lyric writing will greatly improve. If you have written lyrics before, even at a professional level, you can still gain greater control and understanding of your craft with the exercises and worksheets included in this book. Hone your writing technique and skill with this practical and fun approach to the art of lyric writing. Start writing better than ever before! You will learn to: Use different types of consonant and vowel sounds to improve your lyric story * Find more rhymes and choose which ones are most effective * Spotlight important ideas using rhyme. The second edition of this classic songwriting text contains new strategies and insights, as well as analyses of the rhymes of Randy Newman, Warren Zevon, T.S. Eliot, and other songwriters and poets. |
rhyme with cold: A concordance to the rhymes of The Faerie Queene Richard Danson Brown, J. B. Lethbridge, 2021-01-26 This book is the first ever concordance to the rhymes of Spenser’s epic. It gives the reader unparalleled access to the formal nuts and bolts of this massive poem: the rhymes which he used to structure its intricate stanzas. As well as the main concordance to the rhymes, the volume features a wealth of ancillary materials, which will be of value to both professional Spenserians and students, including distribution lists and an alphabetical listing of all the words in The Faerie Queene. The volume breaks new ground by including two studies by Richard Danson Brown and J. B. Lethbridge, so that the reader is given provocative analyses alongside the raw data about Spenser as a rhymer. Brown considers the reception of rhyme, theoretical models and how Spenser’s rhymes may be reading for meaning. Lethbridge in contrast discusses the formulaic and rhetorical character of the rhymes. |
rhyme with cold: The Art of Versification Joseph Berg Esenwein, Mary Eleanor Roberts, 1913 |
rhyme with cold: The Wu-Tang Clan and RZA Alvin Blanco, 2011-04-19 This insightful biography looks at the turbulent lives, groundbreaking music and lyrics, and powerful brand of hip hop's infamous Wu-Tang Clan. The Wu-Tang Clan and RZA: A Trip through Hip Hop's 36 Chambers chronicles the rise of the Wu-Tang Clan from an underground supergroup to a globally recognized musical conglomerate. Enhanced by the author's one-on-one interviews with group members, the book covers the entire Wu-Tang Clan catalog of studio albums, as well as albums that were produced or heavily influenced by producer/rapper RZA. Wu-Tang Clan's albums are analyzed and discussed in terms of their artistry as well as in terms of their critical, cultural, and commercial impact. By delving into the motivation behind the creation of pivotal songs and albums and mining their dense metaphor and wordplay, the book provides an understanding of what made a team of nine friends and relatives from Staten Island with a love of Kung Fu movies into not just a music group, but a powerful cultural movement. |
rhyme with cold: The Complete Cold Mountain Kazuaki Tanahashi, Peter Levitt, 2018-06-26 A fresh translation--and new envisioning--of the most accessible and beloved of all classic Chinese poetry. Welcome to the magical, windswept world of Cold Mountain. These poems from the literary riches of China have long been celebrated by cultures of both East and West—and continue to be revered as among the most inspiring and enduring works of poetry worldwide. This groundbreaking new translation presents the full corpus of poetry traditionally associated with Hanshan (“Cold Mountain”) and sheds light on its origins and authorship like never before. Kazuaki Tanahashi and Peter Levitt honor the contemplative Buddhist elements of this classic collection of poems while revealing Hanshan’s famously jubilant humor, deep love of solitude in nature, and overwhelming warmth of heart. In addition, this translation features the full Chinese text of the original poems and a wealth of fascinating supplements, including traditional historical records, an in-depth study of the Cold Mountain poets (here presented as three distinct authors), and more. |
rhyme with cold: Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists Sacha Jenkins, Elliott Wilson, Jeff Mao, Gabe Alvarez, Brent Rollins, 2014-03-25 Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists is more popular than racism! Hip hop is huge, and it's time someone wrote it all down. And got it all right. With over 25 aggregate years of interviews, and virtually every hip hop single, remix and album ever recorded at their disposal, the highly respected Ego Trip staff are the ones to do it. The Book of Rap Lists runs the gamut of hip hop information. This is an exhaustive, indispensable and completely irreverent bible of true hip hip knowledge. |
rhyme with cold: Commanding Canadians Michael Whitby, 2011-11-01 Commander A.F.C. Layard, RN, wrote almost daily in his diary, in bold, neat script, from the time he entered the Royal Navy as a cadet in 1913 until his retirement in 1947. The pivotal 1943-45 years of this edited volume offer an extraordinarily full and honest chronicle, revealing Layard’s preoccupations, both with the daily details and with the strain and responsibility of wartime command at sea. Enhanced by Michael Whitby’s explanatory essays, the diary sheds light on the inshore anti-submarine campaign in British waters; discusses pivotal events such as the invasions of North Africa and Normandy and convoys to Russia; describes encounters with important personalities; and records the final surrender of German U-boats. It is a highly personal piece of history that greatly enhances our understanding of the Canadian naval experience and the Atlantic war as a whole. A consummately well-researched work, Commanding Canadians will appeal to both naval scholars, as well as to general readers interested in military history. |
rhyme with cold: A New Cold War Zeno Leoni, 2024-07-31 The last decade or so has seen US-China relations enter a negative spiral. The evolution of this complex relationship has triggered a fast-growing debate on whether this is a New Cold War. Building on a deconstruction of concepts such as cold wars and Cold War, this book illustrates how the relationship between the US and China has been a marriage of convenience - with both cooperation and competition - for years, but also that we might be close to the end of it. The US and China, it is argued, are locked in a new type of cold war where mechanisms of deterrence and competition differ compared to those of the Cold War, and which makes the return of bloc politics possible. |
rhyme with cold: Parodies of the Works of English & American Authors , 1889 Includes parodies of Tennyson, Longfellow, Bret Harte, Thomas Hood, Swinburne, Browning, Shakespeare, Milton, Poe, Shelley, Cowper, Coleridge, Herrick, Carroll, Lever, Lover, Burns, Scott, Goldsmith, Kingsley, Byron and many others. |
rhyme with cold: Come Hither: A Collection of Rhymes and Poems for the Young of All Ages Various, 2022-06-13 This book was an anthology of poems and prose edited by an award-winning author Walter John de la Mare, an English poet, short story writer, and novelist. It has a frame story and can be read on several levels. The book was first published in 1923 and was a remarkable success. Alongside children's literature, it includes a selection of the leading Georgian poets (from de la Mare's perspective). |
rhyme with cold: Cold Pizza for Breakfast Christine Lavin, 2010-06-01 As one of the top folk musicians in the country, Christine Lavin has seen it all--and she still loves the music and the life she feels privileged to lead. Published in honor of her twenty-fifth anniversary as a full-time, independent touring musician, Cold Pizza for Breakfast: A Mem-wha? is a memoir of road stories and adventures across the United States, Canada, and Australia. ''I've changed a few names to spare hurt feelings,'' Christine notes, ''but all these stories are true. Hey, I have eight brothers and sisters--you think they'd let me make things up?'' Cold Pizza for Breakfast is rich with details from two-plus decades of songwriting and performing. The memoir begins with the hysterical tale of Christine's being booed in West Palm Beach when she opened for Joan Rivers--with a coda that demonstrates Christine's nimble mind and sense of the absurd--and recounts her circuitous route to becoming one of folk music's most respected and beloved songwriters and performers. Christine explains: ''Instead of a business plan, I've followed hunches, my intuition, and my heart, and I have had the good fortune of meeting astounding people along the way who helped point me in the right direction. OK, a few pointed me in the wrong direction, too. But I always somehow managed to recover.'' Christine is an engaging and generous writer, often putting an informative and warm spotlight on other musicians. Learn delicious details about Dave Van Ronk's unique method of writing music, the stanza of a famous song that Bob Dylan had never heard, and how Ervin Drake came to write ''It Was a Very Good Year.'' Read about the unlikely beginnings of the folk super-group ''The Four Bitchin' Babes,'' still going strong today, and how Christine's music has found a home with some of today's brightest Broadway stars. Photographs and memorabilia from Christine's fantastic voyage, song lyrics, an extensive appendix including an index and Christine's list of her 1,000 favorite songs that she has played while guest-DJing in New York City--all this combines with Christine's incomparable sense of humor to make Cold Pizza for Breakfast: A Mem-wha? an irresistible read and an invaluable resource for anyone who is interested in how songs get made, how musicians learn, and the business of music. |
rhyme with cold: More Toddlers Together Cynthia Catlin, 1996 Continues the author's Toddlers together. Includes indexes. |
rhyme with cold: T.P.'s Weekly , 1916 |
rhyme with cold: The School News and Practical Educator , 1910 |
rhyme with cold: Rhymes of Early Jungle Folk Mary Marcy, 1922 Poems on evolution, geology, and ecology from the standpoint of scientific progressivism. |
rhyme with cold: Strategies for Writing from Sources Jessica Hathaway, 2016-01-01 Students in today's classrooms must be able to draw evidence, reasons, and ideas from various sources. This invaluable classroom resource offers practical, easy-to-use strategies to help students analyze any text and use it as a source in their own writing. Sample lessons guide students to use the provided text both as a source for information as well as a mentor text. Each section includes 5 lessons tailored to the specific grade spans, and correlations to state standards for each grade span are also included. |
rhyme with cold: The queen of hearts, and other nursery rhymes and jingles Queen, 1883 |
rhyme with cold: Derek Mahon: A Retrospective Nicholas Grene, Tom Walker, 2024-09-17 Derek Mahon (1941–2020) is widely recognized as one of the most important Irish poets of his generation. This collection of new critical essays offers an important retrospective assessment of the nature of his poetic achievement. Bringing together many leading scholars of modern and contemporary Irish poetry, including a notable number of accomplished poet-critics, its contributors range widely across Mahon’s body of work. Their essays offer fresh considerations of the biographical, geographical and literary contexts that shaped his poetic voice. This includes paying attention not only to more familiar influences but also to previously little considered interlocutors. The stylistic and formal achievement of his voice is re-evaluated in ways that range from attentive close readings to considerations of his controversial practice of self-revision, and his engagements with music and experiments in translation. The politics of a poet often misleadingly considered apolitical are also reframed to take in the engagements of his early work through to the ecocritical commitment of his later poetry. Indeed, a notable aspect of this book is the consideration it gives to all the phases of Mahon’s career. As a whole, the collection opens up many new ways of reading and understanding Mahon’s important body of work. |
rhyme with cold: The sage of the rural realm comes to the mortal world Cassandra Gold, 2017-03-16 This is a world where the strong are the most respected. Only by constantly becoming stronger can we be qualified to survive! Take grandpa with you? This is out of date. It is the right way to take a little girl with you. Refining medicine, this important task is given to my daughter-in-law. Forging? ... |
rhyme with cold: The Sleeping Doll Jeffery Deaver, 2007-06-05 Lincoln Rhyme is back! The brilliant criminologist returns with his partner and paramour Amelia Sachs, in a blistering bestseller that tests forensic detective work in a brave new world. When Special Agent Kathryn Dance—a brilliant interrogator and kinesics expert with the California Bureau of Investigation—is sent to question the convicted killer Daniel “Son of Manson” Pell as a suspect in a newly unearthed crime, she feels both trepidation and electrifying intrigue. Pell is serving a life sentence for the brutal murders of the wealthy Croyton family in Carmel years earlier—a crime mirroring those perpetrated by Charles Manson in the 1960s. But Pell and his cult members were sloppy: Not only were they apprehended, they even left behind a survivor—the youngest of the Croyton daughters, who, because she was in bed hidden by her toys that terrible night, was dubbed the Sleeping Doll. But the girl never spoke about that night, nor did the crime's mastermind. Indeed, Pell has long been both reticent and unrepentant about the crime. And so with the murderer transported from the Capitola superprison to an interrogation room in the Monterey County Courthouse, Dance sees an opportunity to pry a confession from him for the recent murder—and to learn more about the depraved mind of this career criminal who considers himself a master of control, a dark Svengali, forcing people to do what they otherwise would never conceive of doing. In an electrifying psychological jousting match, Dance calls up all her skills as an interrogator and kinesics—body language—expert to get to the truth behind Daniel Pell. But when Dance's plan goes terribly wrong and Pell escapes, leaving behind a trail of dead and injured, she finds herself in charge of her first-ever manhunt. But far from simply fleeing, Pell turns on his pursuers—and other innocents—for reasons Dance and her colleagues can't discern. As the idyllic Monterey Peninsula is paralyzed by the elusive killer, Dance turns to the past to find the truth about what Daniel Pell is really up to. She tracks down the now teenage Sleeping Doll to learn what really happened that night, and she arranges a reunion of three women who were in his cult at the time of the killings. The lies of the past and the evasions of the present boil up under the relentless probing of Kathryn Dance, but will the truth about Daniel Pell emerge in time to stop him from killing again? |
A Rhyme a Day - PoemZone Poetry Forum
A Rhyme a day keeps the doctor away - plus you don't have to mess with the core. It'll keep your mind going and leave your breath blowing - while giving
Another fun rhyme - was written on new year day
Jul 22, 2017 · My rhymes dont have any variation on theme/ subject. I revolve around the same theme but just switch some rhyming style and schemes. Hence please dont mind the
Our Hearts Bleed - RhymeZone Forums
Jul 12, 2022 · Democracy dies Together, we cry Remember our dear soul Mourn for our hero Things will now change Accept this cruel fate There was no reason to kill Our futures hanging …
Thoughts - RhymeZone Forums
my life is a placebo effect anything i think ill feel i get dead set on the fate ive been given driven with a desire to believe like religion - decisions come and go but i continue to grow showing …
Rocket - RhymeZone Forums
Rocket on the space station, Heavy, huge, strong as an athlete, All vibrates, nervously nods - Loading starting moods.
"i'm okay android" - RhymeZone Forums
Jan 4, 2023 · somehow hippies are the only thing that came out of the 60s and 70s i think and the whole country and the whole world was changed by the entirety of what happened and now …
The Ground - RhymeZone Forums
Today we put my Mother-in-law in the ground It waits for us too Now you are released From Vascular Dementia Its relentless siege What was beyond your Control has set you free to Be …
paradise fade - RhymeZone Forums
the beautiful colors of paradise fade, the color of straw weeds that are dead: the color of burning leaves rising. my head the sound of cars and trains, where in the distance of derangement …
Everything Evil and Important - RhymeZone Forums
Today's Posts; Mark Channels Read; Member List; Calendar; Forum; Share poetry and lyrics; If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above.
What Matters? - RhymeZone Forums
What Matters? Some say the earth is six thousand years old. Others count its age in the billions. Who’s right? I don’t know, but the view that I hold Is that, thousands or billions or trillions, …
A Rhyme a Day - PoemZone Poetry Forum
A Rhyme a day keeps the doctor away - plus you don't have to mess with the core. It'll keep your mind going and leave your breath blowing - while giving
Another fun rhyme - was written on new year day
Jul 22, 2017 · My rhymes dont have any variation on theme/ subject. I revolve around the same theme but just switch some rhyming style and schemes. …
Our Hearts Bleed - RhymeZone Forums
Jul 12, 2022 · Democracy dies Together, we cry Remember our dear soul Mourn for our hero Things will now change Accept this cruel fate There was no …
Thoughts - RhymeZone Forums
my life is a placebo effect anything i think ill feel i get dead set on the fate ive been given driven with a desire to believe like religion - decisions come …
Rocket - RhymeZone Forums
Rocket on the space station, Heavy, huge, strong as an athlete, All vibrates, nervously nods - Loading starting …