Ca'd'Oro
At the Venice Cemetery all souls are one island
This bit of the Gran Canal is mine
Tide flood
I'm getting older but I don't mind
The reciter ghost
The show must go on
The sighs that are heard aren't caused by the cana…
San Bernardino de Siena
LOVING SMILE - 39
There are a few whales out there but many Jonah's…
The top of the stairs is the key to understanding
I will win the €uromillion
"TO A GOD UNKNOWN"
The day may not be glorious but the crown is there
Venus with a mirror
Roots build the life
How many are we?
LOVING SMILE - 40
Time goes too fast
No one can be indifferent to the magnificence
Heróis do mar, nobre povo, Nação valente, imortal
Dance of the Swans
Navegar é preciso. Viver não é preciso.
Rural Inconsistency
LOVING SMILE - 38
"Beachy Head"
Sun does not occupy any seat on the terrace
Sunday with upraised nose against grey weather
Almedina Gate
Looking for my own shadow
The gate
Mass Grave (title by .t.a.o.n.)
Aimez-vous Brahms?
Strong and ugly
Is anybody there?
MOTHER
PEOPLE WHO WASHES IN THE RIVER
Rural precariousness
Neither the 1755 earthquake jeopardized the water…
See also...
Group of the Visual Poets (2 photos/day, no invite needed :)
Group of the Visual Poets (2 photos/day, no invite needed :)
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ATHENS


Did you take me for a Greek word?
Most do, but I pre-date the Greeks.
I used to describe a limestone plateau
where dusty snakes and small owls lived
with a people from whose mouths emerged
my extensive family. I miss the sound
of my original kin as I muck in
with this new crowd, biting my tongue
when I hear two or even three words stuck
together to describe skies my first family
got in a syllable - skies that occur at nighfall
in Attica after days of languor in late August
(you know the ones). But as I mourn the fall
in standards, I tell myself to be grateful
I'm uttered without nostalgia and remain
the name of this place. I'd hate to join Siam,
Byzantium, Saigon, Rangoon, Bombay -
beautiful words in various stages of decay.
by Helen FARISH, in "LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS", Volume 37, Number 16, 27 August 2015
(photo taken from the book UNESCO, Património da Humanidade, Tomo VI, Europa Oriental)
Most do, but I pre-date the Greeks.
I used to describe a limestone plateau
where dusty snakes and small owls lived
with a people from whose mouths emerged
my extensive family. I miss the sound
of my original kin as I muck in
with this new crowd, biting my tongue
when I hear two or even three words stuck
together to describe skies my first family
got in a syllable - skies that occur at nighfall
in Attica after days of languor in late August
(you know the ones). But as I mourn the fall
in standards, I tell myself to be grateful
I'm uttered without nostalgia and remain
the name of this place. I'd hate to join Siam,
Byzantium, Saigon, Rangoon, Bombay -
beautiful words in various stages of decay.
by Helen FARISH, in "LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS", Volume 37, Number 16, 27 August 2015
(photo taken from the book UNESCO, Património da Humanidade, Tomo VI, Europa Oriental)
, .t.a.o.n., Soeradjoen (limited time), beverley have particularly liked this photo
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