poetry without the blog, today, would be merely university publications. poets wrote the greek and roman myths, the norse myths, the spirit stories of our nation's orginal, at least those before '1492,' peoples. CS Lewis used it in Chronicles of Narnia, Tolkien used it too, learning from MCDonald and Chaucer as well as Dante's love story of Beatrice and urequited love. Today, post twentieth century myths are dymythologized into nothing, missing that myth's tool was to tell a story, and iconographic story, the pictures drawn to be a window into a larger story. GK Chesterton wrote (para), 'Children learn from fairytales and myths, not that dragons and fairies are real; but when needed they are able to be defeated.' The 'blog' world allows for those that have be subject or embraced this dymythological, non-storytelling 'normal' published poetry - to write, perhaps tell the stories that otherwise will not be known to our posterity.
from here we can eliminate, one at a time, syncretism, replacing with the beauty of synergy...
Write!
From the university, from the net, from your pad and pen or pencil, from your keypad, write!
Write!
Your story, not mine, not someone else, but your story.
Write!
from here we can eliminate, one at a time, syncretism, replacing with the beauty of synergy...
Write!
From the university, from the net, from your pad and pen or pencil, from your keypad, write!
Write!
Your story, not mine, not someone else, but your story.
Write!