Weird-Birdby Shel Silverstein Birds are flyin' south for winter. Here's the Weird-Bird headin' north, Wings a-flappin', beak a-chatterin', Cold head bobbin' back 'n' forth. He says, "It's not that I like ice Or freezin' winds and snowy ground. It's just sometimes it's kind ...
Bear In Thereby Shel Silverstein There's a Polar Bear In our Frigidaire-- He likes it 'cause it's cold in there. With his seat in the meat And his face in the fish And his big hairy paws In the buttery dish, He's nibbling the noodles, He's munching the rice, He's slurping the...
Great poem. Which isn't surprising since silverstein wrote it. I found it really sad though, the love the tree had for the boy, and the way he used the tree. But who can't relate to the tree? ? 58 14 Reply Paula Lancaster 30 July 2013 I love this! Ken for you! 1 34 ...
I've known this poem for many years and never knew it was Shel Silverstein. I've only heard T. Graham Brown sing it as a lyrics. 0 0 Reply Sylvia Frances Chan 02 February 2022 An excellent poem with a hilarious undertone, as if he is holding the mirror in front of him. This...
可以帮我翻译一下以下的话:(谢尔大叔 Shel Silverstein)〈他是一名画家,诗人,歌手,剧作家,作曲家于一身的艺术大师,他的作品都展现出另类的温馨、惊人的幽默和想象力。其中《阁楼上的光》(A light in the Attic)可谓经典之作。今天我介绍的就是《阁楼上的光》这本书中的一首诗。〉 扫码下载作业帮搜索答疑一搜...
Johnny Cash made this Silverstein song/poem famous and proved that they made a great duo, although very few knew that the song’s true author was Silverstein. The father’s logic for naming his son Sue is both cruel and bizarre. Well, my daddy left home when I was three...
‘Needles and Pins’ by Shel Silverstein is a simple light-hearted children’s poem that depicts a need for new experiences through musical language.
Shel Silverstein. Banda sonora: Casi famosos. Shel Silverstein nació el 25 de septiembre de 1930 en Chicago, Illinois, Estados Unidos. Fue un escritor y compositor, conocido por Casi famosos (2000), Criaturas fronterizas - Border (2018) y Un final inesp
The Little Boy and the Old Man by Shel Silverstein - Said the little boy, "Sometimes I drop my spoon." Said the old man, "I do that too." The little boy whispered, "I wet
The words of another poem form the neck of a giraffe. Silverstein often eschewed happy endings because children, he said, might otherwise wonder why they themselves were not comparably happy. He was credited for helping young readers develop an appreciation of poetry, and his serious verse ...