Hoʻoponopono (a Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness) is a 300-line univocalic poem using only the vowel "O". It tells a story of discommunication between a university provost Osmond Bogomolov and a student Kotono Otomo, who's about to play her solo concert performance on koto. Its oulipoesqe form is metaphorized in heroes' narrow perspectives that are coming to clash with each other, both looking to bring order into existence.
Ioueay Oiseaux is a series of univocalic and lipogrammatic poems expressing the dual nature of existence, the material and the metaphysical. The word "ioueay" is the shortest word used in English containing all six vowels meaning "like an iouea", which is a type of fossil sponge, or a cretaceous coup. It's juxtaposed against the French word "oiseaux" meaning "birds", creating an image of creatures that are both deep under water and high up in the sky simultaneously.
Hoʻoponopono - Part I
- 価格米ドル価格数量有効期限送信元
- 価格米ドル価格数量最低価格差有効期限送信元
Hoʻoponopono (a Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness) is a 300-line univocalic poem using only the vowel "O". It tells a story of discommunication between a university provost Osmond Bogomolov and a student Kotono Otomo, who's about to play her solo concert performance on koto. Its oulipoesqe form is metaphorized in heroes' narrow perspectives that are coming to clash with each other, both looking to bring order into existence.
Ioueay Oiseaux is a series of univocalic and lipogrammatic poems expressing the dual nature of existence, the material and the metaphysical. The word "ioueay" is the shortest word used in English containing all six vowels meaning "like an iouea", which is a type of fossil sponge, or a cretaceous coup. It's juxtaposed against the French word "oiseaux" meaning "birds", creating an image of creatures that are both deep under water and high up in the sky simultaneously.