austin+Baggaley

Oscar Wilde
 * You should study the Peerage, Gerald. It is the one book a young man about town should know thoroughly, and it is the best thing in fiction the English have ever done.**

that poem u dont know

chillin on the block wit my boy feelin good like you should on a sunday afternoon when at the table wheelin and deelin roolin down the street wit ya bou and goon sorry im leaving my style but now im back here we go just let it flow out like a fosit but boy im still goin cuz i neva eva lost it so do like a salad and toss it out the window wile your drivin to your high school reunion tryin to look good dressto impress but what do i got to worry about i was always flyer than the rest ya ka haha i wish i could rewind back to those days.

an ode to life i have a beautiful girl to my left but she a thief cuz she just stole my breath but life is just getting good so i cant take a risk walk out the store and crack my brisk role down the street and take a sip see a fly dressin man wit a limp he got some hoes so he called a pimp so lets goooooo.

i am raised by grate smells in the kitchen holding hands around the table being told to be grateful

i am raised by creaky floors squeaky doors and dusty stairs

i am raised by funny looks stupid jokes and one person laughing

i am raised by pain in the chest joy in the heart and a smart remark. THAT OR WHAT by Austin Baggaley that what is that is it big is it small is it short is it tall is it fat is it slim what is that that is the thing that is most important, most of all it dose not matter if it is big or if it is small nor if its short or if its tall that is that so what is what dose it matter? only if that depends on what and if what depends on that than that means what? that means we can do what and that at the same time even if that means doing what.

Kay ryan

But how dark is darkest? Does it get jet --or tar-- black; does it glint and increase in hardness or turn viscous? Are there stages of darkness and chips to match against its increments, holding them up to our blindness, estimating when we'll have this night behind us?

In this poem, written by Kay Ryan, he is addressing darkness, the various shades of darkness, and when the darkness will end, but he is using darkness as a substitute to refer to his bad night. The way he addresses the topic of darkness he uses a rhyme scheme to emphasize the topic of darkness. There are no repeated words or opposites in this poem, but he does use punctuation. The line length stays under five syllables. The language is formal but is no William Shakespeare the way he **w**rote this poem helps the reader because its not to out of date kind of writing were you won’t understand it.

by Kay Ryan

Kay Ryan The whole ball of who we arepresses intothe green baizeat a single tinyspot. An auraltrack of cracklebetrays our passagethrough thefibrous jungle.It’s hot anddesperate. Insectsspring out of it.The pressure isintense, and thesense that we’velost proportion.As though bringingtoo much to beartoo locally wereour decision.

In this poem, written by Kay Ryan, he is __addressing the life we live as human beings he describes life as a fibrous jungle with insects springing out of it, the insects being problems and challenges, and we are put under a lot of pressure by having to meet expectations and exceed expectations.__ The way Kay addresses this topic is clever and interesting. He does not use rhyme schemes, has no more than five syllables in each line, he does have a made up word in this poem baizeat. He uses proper English, this helps the reader because its easy to understand.

Felix Crow
by Kay Ryan Kay Ryan Crow school is basic and short as a rule— just the rudiments of quid pro crow for most students. Then each lives out his unenlightened span, adding his bit of blight to the collected history of pushing out the sweeter species; briefly swaggering the swagger of his aggravating ancestors down my street. And every time I like him when we meet.

In this poem, written by Kay Ryan, he is addressing a way of life by speaking about a school as life the few rules it has is the way of life he is living. There are no more than six syllables in each line he does use punctuation, he uses rhyme scheme in two lines of the poem he does use proper English this helps the reader because its easy to understand.

Austin Baggaley as a poet i make choices and these choices is what makes me a poet.