What is poetry?

Have you seen any other erotic poetry that use such frank language about sex and female parts what d you think

  • What do you think of erotic poetry that use such explicite language about sex and female parts Is it appropirate for poetry to be so explicite or should erotic poetry be more decorous. WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS POETRY DOES IT TURN YOU ON at this site http://www.angelfire.com/poetry/gamahuch/

  • Answer:

    Poetry does not need to be in any particular style. "Decorous" is no more or less appropriate than vulgar language. What matters is that the poetry causes the reader to respond with her or his mind, that the language is sufficiently fresh and expressive to convey the full weight of emotion or thinking behind the poem's composition onto the reader. It doesn't matter if it is about the sight of a bowl of flowers or the feeling of a lover's insides, it is all in the language. "Poetry" that "turns you on" is almost certainly NOT poetry. That would be an aid to masturbation, which we typically call pornography. It might be poetic, but that is not the same thing. And it is quite possible that it is also poetry. Poetry follows no rules.

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No. No. No. If I mentioned that Charlotte is so tasty and sweet, make me wanna lick it over! Am I being a spoon? Are you thinking about the dessert or something else?

Laloo

'****' is mentioned in 'the miller's tale' [chaucer]: "Pryvely he caught hir by the queynte." ... **** This word for the female genitalia dates back to the Middle English period, c.1325. It's exact origin is unknown, but is related to the Old Norse kunta, a word with cognates in several other Germanic languages. From the Proverbs of Hendyng, a manuscript from sometime before 1325: Yeue thi cunte to cunnig and craue affetir wedding. There is a potentially earlier usage in the name of a London street, Gropecuntelane, from c.1230. Also likely to be related is the noun quaint, which in Middle English was used to denote the female genitalia. From Sir Tristrem from c.1320: Hir queynt abouen hir kne Naked the knithtes knewe. Use of **** as term of abuse for a woman is a 20th century sense. From Frederic Manning's 1929 The Middle Parts of Fortune: What's the **** want to come down 'ere buggering us about for, 'aven't we done enough bloody work in th' week? **** does not come from the Latin cunnus, which is also a term for the female pudenda, although a common root back in the mists of time cannot be discounted. (Source: Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition)

wilde.reader

you mean Kama Sutra?

Emo

i don't know whether it is right or wrong. all i know is that i come from a country were literature is quite pornographic these days due to the fact that for many years no one could write such things because of the censorship. and now, people are trying to fill a gap having the feeling that they are allowed to speak freely.

♫Pavic♫

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