Your Questions About Loves Poems To My Wife

Laura asks…
what is a love poem i could say to my wife?
i want something sweet and loving to make her have a smile on her face and giveme a great kiss
Jason answers:
Neruda (Pablo Neruda)
Sonnet XVII
I do not love you as if you were salt-rose, or topaz,
or the arrow of carnations the fire shoots off.
I love you as certain dark things are to be loved,
in secret, between the shadow and the soul.
I love you as the plant that never blooms
but carries in itself the light of hidden flowers;
thanks to your love a certain solid fragrance,
risen from the earth, lives darkly in my body.
I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where.
I love you straightforwardly, without complexities or pride;
so I love you because I know no other way
than this: where I does not exist, nor you,
so close that your hand on my chest is my hand,
so close that your eyes close as I fall asleep.
That’s a real doosy. What I like most of all is when my husband writes me an unexpected note and he’ll call me his bride or tell me he’s still thinking about last night or… Sometimes he’ll do something small like make coffee before I get to it or throw in a load of clothes- make the bed – what ever it is if it’s helpful and unexpected it is so appreciated. I want to kiss him just thinking about it!

Mandy asks…
Spanish Poems?
Does anyone know any Spanish love poems. My wife is in another in Ecuador and i want to send her something that will tell her how much I love her.
Jason answers:
I love Clandestino’s choice. Bella by Amado Nervo is superb. If she doesn’t cry when she reads it, then she’s got a heart made of ice.

Sandy asks…
A Travel surprise for my wife?
My wife is going on a short vacation this summer and I have to stay home because of work. I”m putting together some poems and love stories and I’m going to write some love letters for her to read while she’s gone. Ladies, do you have any ideas on what I could include
Jason answers:
WOW, what a lucky woman she is. I must say I admire your commitment to your wife , you don’t see that alot of that anymore. You could make a cd of love songs for her to take with her that express the way you feel about her, or songs that are “your songs” that remind her of you and the memories the two of you have made together.

William asks…
Charlie sheen addicted to prostitutes?
What is wrong with that guy?! Why would any guy want a prostitute when they have someone like Denise Richards at home?! If she was my wife id never even THINK of being with another woman. In fact if she was my wife, id massage her feet and write her love poems every day. I actually knew an escort who said she had Charlie booked for an appoinment. She was average looking. I guess i would have banged her but i sure wouldnt have have payed for it, especially if i was married to Denise Richards! And then theres Hugh Grant. He paid to have sex with Divine Brown when he has Elizabeth Hurley at home. Why?! Have you seen Divine Brown? She doesnt even look like an escort, she looks like a cheap hooker! Is he nuts? Whats wrong with these guys?…why?!
Yes i agree with $ can buy happines. Money is how they landed chicks like Denise Richards & Elizabeth Hurley. These chicks would keep me happy. In fact if either of these chicks were my wife id might even put an effort of acting like i was paying attention 2 what they r saying and nod my head yes & say “i agree” every couple of minutes. But yeah its like i often wonder, y do men have nipples and y do women have voices? I know what the mouth is 4 but the voice i just dont get.
And to the other comment, were u trying 2 make a point or b funny? Cuz if u were i dont get it. If u really dont know who he is, then its probably because your really young. Which would make sense because u seem 2 b stuck on nickelodeon. CHARLIE Sheen is an actor that stared in a ton of movies & even his own sitcom. He was married 2 a beautiful model. And he is known for sleeping with a whole lot of prostitutes, which doesnt make much sense 2 me. If u dont know what a prostitute is, its a woman that has…..
Jason answers:
Prostitutes keep their yaps shut, and go home when Charlie is done.
See, money does buy happiness.

Daniel asks…
A poem and a mistake, what should I do?
I am a writer and a poet. My father was very wealthy, and he gave me an excellent education, including study under great rhetoricians. He wanted me to become a lawyer and later on – an important official. My father sent me abroad to improve myself, and then I worked for some time in minor legal positions, but disliked it too much. Politics didn’t attract me, too. I am more emotional than logical. So, I dropped the law. I started writing poems, and quickly got my own fan club. I wrote “Loves“, five-book collection, a love book collection, all tongue in cheek. My next poem, “The Art of Love”, parodied didactic poetry and was, in fact, a manual of seduction and intrigue. Then I wrote a long epic poem, based on Greek mythology, and it was a success again. I was a happy person – I succeeded in my work, and in my private life (though I’ve been married thrice, I was divorced twice, and was much in love with my third wife). Then, all of a sudden I was forcibly deported and forbidden to return to my own country. I believe that it was because of one poem I wrote. It was all imaginary, but it described to the points “fine” deeds and adventures of a very important man in the government. Top important. He thought that I knew his secret, and deported me to a wild, barbarian place, Tomis, on the Black Sea. I wrote numerous appeals to him, but he would not listen. I think that he’s got already that the first time I was innocent, and it was all a poetic imagination. But I am in the secret now all the same, since I guessed why I was exiled. So, my chances to come back are minimal. And I am unhappy here. People around me are kind to me but roughly educated. I miss my third wife. I started a a poem about the Rome calendar, and did the first six books — January – June. For the rest, I need an extensive academic library or two, and there are none here. The winters are long and cold, and I am depressed. What should I do to unable me to go back home?
Jason answers:
Don’t worry, poet of the future, for in spirit you will be borne up to soar beyond the distant stars, immortal in the name you leave behind; and wherever Roman governance extends over the subject nations of the world, your words will be upon the people’s lips, and if there is truth in poets’ prophecies, then in your fame forever will you live.
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