• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • Reading
    • Blog
    • On Writing
    • Interviews
    • Famous Authors
    • Stories
    • Poetry
  • Writing
    • Writing Tips
    • Writing Inspiration
    • Playground
    • Writing Prompts
  • Publishing
    • Publishing Tips
    • Literary Magazines
    • Book Publishers
  • Promotions
    • Book Promotions
    • Promoting Tips
    • Classifieds
    • Newsletter
  • Submit

Every Day Poems

A Poem A Day

  • Poetry of the 1500s
  • Poetry of the1600s
  • Poetry of the 1700s
  • Poems for Kids
  • War Poems
  • Every Poem

a young dog’s howl in the wind by Ian MacMenamin

September 11, 2011 by Every Writer

a young dog’s howl in the wind

by Ian MacMenamin

waves
american trains
running through
veins. endless
whiskey tears
golden hearts
and crazy
Fear.
she rides
it all
and calls
the world
her
shell.

###

Ian MacMenamin is a psychology student in Deventer, the Netherlands. Basically he listens to a lot of music, reads a lot of books and plays the piano, the guitar and the violin. He enjoys reading works of Wilde and some modern poets. Sometimes he plays at a rundown blues bar in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands. Web-site/blog: still-stone.blogspot.com

Filed Under: 2000, Nature Poems

Primary Sidebar

AD




Search

Latest

Because We Steer by Dead Stars by Claire Scott

Claire Scott is an award winning poet who has received multiple Pushcart Prize nominations. Her work has been accepted by the Atlanta Review, Bellevue Literary Review, New Ohio Review, Enizagam and Healing Muse among others.

I’ve Set Out All of the Traps for Us by Kiara Nicole Letcher

I start to miss you right after you leave
and then at night I feel a deep ache
in that need spot.

The Shaman by Larry D. Thomas

Larry D. Thomas, a member of the Texas Institute of Letters, was the 2008 Texas Poet Laureate. He has published several award-winning and critically acclaimed collections of poetry

Copyright © 2023 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in