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Position:Home>Poetry> I dropped this poem and a feather at the same time. Which one hit the ground fir


Question:*****
Road Sine
by TD Euwaite

The long straight road has no end
It intersects with paths meandering
Over…and over again

*****


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker: *****
Road Sine
by TD Euwaite

The long straight road has no end
It intersects with paths meandering
Over…and over again

*****

in my case, poems TD...my poems are already done to dust and silver fishes and moths feed on my manuscripts...
but in your case, feather for sure...and your poems are too great to kiss the ground...they will have their nests in the reader's hearts

Sounds like you'll need some Aquatreads on that road.

Well, if it's a poem about a feather, they must have hit the ground together ?!

Dude, the poem cuz it's heavy, man!

Meanders are road sins.

The feather...no poem of your's is about to hit the ground!

What is the poem written on?

If it's written in a book, then the poem! Feathers float down slowly, silly. :)

According to Newton, at the same time they will land. That is, if I remember my Newtonian laws correctly.

"I breathed a song into the air,
It fell to earth, I knew not where;
For who has sight so keen and strong,
That it can follow the flight of song?"

Longfellow's first law of the gravity of poems. The feather would hit first because your poem is already galaxies away.

Gadzooks, wishing you weren't so bright at this hour of the morning.

Don't you ever sleep? The feather never hit the ground on Mars, it's still orbiting the planet.

Meanders are road sins
so says Annabelle dear
Since its over and over
a penance for your sins...
A Martian Ode ol gondolier.

I'd say they are both falling still. The atmosphere is so light!

Was there a THUD??
I guess not
None of your poems are Duds
I'll say the Feather

Sounds like Ground Hog Day
Over...& over ........