It can be embarrassing to be the only virgin at a party, but it doesn’t have to be. A book of sexual poems can help you get over this awkward situation. Some of the authors you can try include Moi-Meme Ombre, Ellen Bass, Paula Sheil, Alexis Rhone Fancher, and more.
Patricia Lockwood
Patricia Lockwood’s sexual poems are a rare form of poetry, often aching with imagination, yet always subtly funny. Lockwood is a poet born in the Midwest who never attended college. Her poetic voice echoes Marianne Moore and Anne Waldman’s use of anaphora, and her work often employs the language of Dorothe Lasky.
While Lockwood writes about sex, her work also addresses social norms and sexuality. She tries to achieve a level of honesty that enables readers to relate to her characters, even when the subject matter is uncomfortable. Lockwood’s work is groundbreaking, and her characters are often uncomfortably childlike or hypersexual.
Moi-Meme Ombre
Moi-Meme Ombre sexual poems are an excellent example of poetry with a sexual theme. They are usually addressed to a lover, and the poet creates the lover as a work of art or a divinity. The poet’s lover is a vehicle for the poet’s genius.
Paula Sheil
Paula Sheil’s sexual poems explore the nature of sexual attraction and the relationship between gender and sexuality. These works are accompanied by an exhibition of the author’s art. The show took place at the Brentwood Business and Technology Center, a venue sponsored by the Brentwood Arts Commission. The performers included dancers, jazz musicians, and painters. The performance was also featured in Juliana’s Kitchen Sacramento, Calif.
Alexis Rhone Fancher
Alexis Rhone Fancher has written a number of erotic poems about her experiences as an adult. These poems are erotic and funny, but they also have a somber side. Fancher is also an accomplished photographer. Her poems depict various parts of the body.
Fancher’s work defies the socially-established rules about what is permissible and what isn’t. She writes from a place of empowerment and resistance to socially-established sexual oppression. As a result, her sexual poems explore the outer reaches of lust, sensuality, and sexual encounter, acknowledging pleasure and disillusionment as they occur. Her language and narratives convey a spirit of indomitable defiance, often concealing an inner vulnerability.
Pablo Neruda
If you love poetry and erotica, you will certainly appreciate Pablo Neruda’s sexual poems. He is one of the most celebrated 20th century Latin American poets. His most famous collection, Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair, was published in 1924, and earned him international recognition. He went on to become a political activist, diplomat, and humanitarian, and won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1971.
Neruda’s sexual poems are often very provocative. One such poem, “Every Day You Play,” plays with the idea of a damsel in distress and the knight in shining armor. In this poem, the knight refers to his woman as “little one” and orders her to surrender her body to him.
Pablo Neruda’s ‘Sonnet XI’
Pablo Neruda’s Sonnet xI is a collection of sexual poems that are both challenging and enthralling. The poems are both passionate and ferocious, and Neruda uses a natural language to describe his lover and his relationship. He uses love as a means of returning to nature, and the poet’s desire to return to nature is reflected in the words he uses to describe his lover.
The language used in these poems is intense, often combining imagery and figurative language. One poem compares love to the hunts of a wild cat. Neruda emphasizes the raunchy and primal nature of love in his language, using animal references and imagery to illustrate the desire. In other words, Neruda’s sexual poems convey the elemental nature of love, and show how powerful it can be.