Liste des Groupes | Revenir à ra poems |
On Sat, 15 Feb 2025 20:53:52 +0000, W.Dockery wrote:https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/48808396-selected-poems-1976-2019&ved=2ahUKEwiw14igx8aLAxWQLtAFHabxJGIQFnoECCAQAQ&usg=AOvVaw3xxyq9fiWP8SIo6KuERr4x
>On Sat, 15 Feb 2025 19:46:14 +0000, HarryLime wrote:>
>On Mon, 10 Feb 2025 6:00:02 +0000, Will-Dockery wrote:>
>>HarryLime wrote:
On Sun, 9 Feb 2025 3:47:35 +0000, Will Dockery wrote:
>On Sat, 8 Feb 2025 20:17:40 +0000, HarryLime wrote:
>
Will Dockery wrote:
On Sat, 8 Feb 2025 17:56:44 +0000, HarryLime wrote:
>
On Fri, 7 Feb 2025 15:23:14 +0000, Will Dockery wrote:
HarryLime wrote:
Will Dockery wrote:>offensiveI Met A Girl
>
I met a girl
she came from California.
It was in a dream
we knew each other instantly.
She was a little freckled girl
from out of
my high school past.
>
And she looked up at me
and talked real spacey.
I've forgotten her name
though she told it to me twice.
>
We talked
a really detached situation.
She said years ago
I was so shy
she thought I was gay.
At this point I kissed her
and put my finger to her hole.
>
And she looked up at me
and talked real spacey.
I have forgotten her name
though she told it to me twice.
>
I don't know why it was
that I would think of her.
I made a couple of puns
about her name that made me blush.
But her softness in tone
made me feel all right.
>
All I want to do
is get in contact.
>
-Will Dockery / May 8 1982
>
Good to see....
>
Thanks again, as I was telling Mummy Chunk, in 1982 when writing these
poems I
was highly influenced by 1950s Beat poets and 1980s punk rockers.
>
So please excuse the foul language.
>
Referring to a woman's v*gina as a "hole" is considered bothdoesn'tand misogynistic>
>
That's why I apologized for the foul language in the poem.
>
But the *language* (the word "hole") isn't offensive
>
In context it could be to some readers.
In context of the poem, it is most definitely offensive.
>
However, it is offensive for the reasons that I pointed out above. The
word in and of itself is not offensive.
>
Words have very specific meanings, Will.
>
You need to learn how to use them correctly.
>
When you use a word that doesn't quite mean what you think it means, you
end up saying something that isn't true... or that isn't what you'd
intended to express.
>
"Hole" is not an example of "foul language."
>
Your use of "hole" in the poem is extremely offensive. But thatmake it "foul language."are not the same
>
Foul language is offensive by definition. However, not everything that
is offensive is considered foul language.
>
IOW the words "foul language" and "offensive language"thing.as offensive words in
>
If I call you a fat, stupid redneck, I am using language to offend you.
"Fat," "stupid," and "redneck" can all be seenthis context.not examples of "foul
>
However, "fat," "stupid," and "redneck" arelanguage."close
>
Neither is "hole."
>
It isn't difficult to learn how to use language correctly. But you
aren't going to learn it by simply picking it up from experience. When
you read a word in an article, a book, or a Usenet post, you can figure
out its meaning from its context. However, this method only provides
you with an approximation of the word's meaning at best.
>
The fact that you have learned everything you know about writing from
this method is obvious from your posts. Apologizing for having used
"foul language" is *close* to being correct. That is to say, it'senough that others can figure out what you actually mean without much>
difficulty.
>
And while this sort of thing is acceptable in casual, spoken
conversations, it is not acceptable when writing literary works, or
conversing with other writers online.
>
If you want to be a writer, you need to learn how to write.
>
If you want people to take you seriously in Usenet and other social
media platforms, you need to learn how to write.
>
And the only way that you're going to learn how to write is by enrolling
in a series of online courses.
>
--
>
Thanks for the advice but I've been writing poetry for over 50 years, so
I
know what I'm doing.
Obviously
>
Exactly:
LOL! Published by your friend, George Dance.
>
You've never had a *real* publication credit in your life.
>
>Thanks again for asking, Harry.>
For asking
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