Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Kiana Khansmith

blake kathryn
Sade Olutola
dirt enthusiast
todays bird
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@theartofmadeline

oozey mess
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
DEAR READER
Peter Solarz
cherry valley forever

tannertan36
h

shark vs the universe
NASA
YOU ARE THE REASON

titsay
styofa doing anything
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@fuigllop
Egyptian soldier reading the Qu'ran during the Yom Kippur War, 1973.
khalil gibran
Collage, 2015
An Ode To David Hockney’s Swimming Pool Oil on Canvas with artist frame 116 x 154 cm 2015
you and me, red light, bed sheets, pencil and paper and a polaroid cam
Yasuhiro Onishi
Gabriel Isak ©
- i believe in you -
Some Syrian love poetry from Nizar Qabbani for National Poetry today. Get your fainting couches ready. I Have No Power
‘I have no power to change you or explain your ways Never believe a man can change a woman Those men are pretenders who think that they created woman from one of their ribs Woman does not emerge from a man’s rib’s, not ever, it’s he who emerges from her womb like a fish rising from depths of water and like streams that branch away from a river It’s he who circles the sun of her eyes and imagines he is fixed in place I have no power to tame you or domesticate you or mitigate your first instincts This task is impossible I’ve tested my intelligence on you also my dumbness Nothing worked with you, neither guidance nor temptation Stay primitive as you are I have no power to break your habits for thirty years you have been like this for three hundred years a storm trapping in a bottle a body by nature sensing the scent of a man assaults it by nature triumphs over it by nature Never believe what a man says about himself that he is the one who makes the poems and makes the children It is the woman who writes the poems and the man who signs his name to them It is the woman who bears the children and the man who signs at the maternity hospital that he is the father I have no power to change your nature my books are of no use to you and my convictions do not convince you nor does my fatherly council do you any good you are the queen of anarchy, of madness, of belonging to no one Stay that way You are the tree of femininity that grows in the dark needs no sun or water you the sea princess who has loved all men and loved no one slept with all men… and slept with no one you are the Bedouin woman who went with all the tribes and returned a virgin Stay that way.’
A Rafael Alberti:
El último niño en el desierto llora por Madrid. Canta el fuego de los poetas españoles muertos desterrado: Lorca, Machado. El último gigante, en su abrigo, llora bajo la estrella polar y bajo la nieve. Nos paramos junto al poste de luz mientras "Roma busca a Roma". Yo te llamé: ¡Alberti!... Y respondió el verso. El relámpago oculto en nubes que caminaban sangrando en la noche del destierro alumbró todas las penas de los españoles. Y respondió Roma. Respondió la música salvaje de la mar. Eramos niños. Nos hundimos en el bosque, pero la música se calmó y la mar se ocultó en libros que hablaban de una luz que venía de dentro de Toledo de una estrella árabe que vagaba por Europa y se dormía en la Puerta toledana. Eramos niños en el país-exilio.
Abdel-Wahhab al-Bayati, Amor más grande que yo mismo (poemas). Selección, traducción y notas por Pedro Martínez Montávez, Madrid: Asociación de amistad hispano-árabe, 1985.
Mahmoud Darwish along with Adonis. 1970′s Beirut.
pray for IRAQ
Mahmoud Darwish. 1971, Cairo, Egypt.
Ruth Thorne-Thomson
Within This Garden, 1993
(via)