Browsing the archives for the poetry tag.


One Amazon Link Can Lead to a Shopping Spree

squidoo, websites
Amazon.com-Logo

Image via Wikipedia

The amazing thing about one Amazon link on your Squidoo lens or web page is that it can lead to several sales to the same person in one go.

Many people make a lens or page containing many links to different products on Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk or other Amazon sites in your targeted countries. That’s not a bad thing to do as long as your page is interesting enough to keep visitors reading and looking at your links. This is why it’s important to make your links to Amazon products relevant to the subject of the lens.

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Amazing – People Like Poetry!

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The Jumblies
The Jumblies – Image via Wikipedia Public Domain

I’ve always liked poetry, even as a child. That’s why I decided to make a lens called Classic Funny Poems for Kids. I included poems like The Jumblies, Matilda Told Such Dreadful Lies and A Naughty Little Comet.

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More poetry

books, squidoo

I’ve done a companion lens to the Funny Poems one I did a few days ago. As it’s now my most popular lens, and that’s in just 3 days since it was published, I’m glad I started the new one, Classic Poems for Kids straightaway.

It’s got some of the poems I loved as a child like Sea Fever, the Smuggler’s Song and The Donkey. Although they were all written many years ago, I think they have really stood the test of time and are enjoyed by children today. As with the funny poems, it’s the rhythm and rhymes that makes them so popular. Children don’t generally want experimental poetry!

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Introduce young children to books

books


I think I was about 6 or 7 years old when I learned to read and it was momentous. We were encouraged to read for pleasure at school and I took to it like a duck to water.

I can vividly remember saving up for five weeks to get a particular paperback book, The Children Who Lived in a Barn. Finally, I received my pocket money on Saturday as usual and I thought I had enough money but, when I counted it, I was one penny short. I was so upset. Luckily, my aunt was visiting us and she not only gave me the penny I needed, she gave me the whole amount. Virtue rewarded!

To show how long ago this happened, the book cost 2/6 as we used to write it which was two shillings and sixpence, the equivalent today of about 22.5 pence (50 cents approx). I got sixpence a week pocket money which is how I know how long I’d saved. I can still remember the book today and was amazed to discover that it’s been reprinted in the UK by Persephone Books and is for sale on Amazon.co.uk.

I love poetry and have many books of poems which I dip into often. My love of poetry began at infants school when we were read poems like Edward Lear’s The Jumblies and The Owl and the Pussycat.

I always encourage children to read and love books. I give any children of family and friends books as Christmas or birthday gifts. The only surprise for them is which book or books they’ll get. It seems to have worked well because those children that are now grown up all love to read too but I can’t take all the credit. Their parents encouraged their love of reading and books by reading to them and taking them to the library to borrow books. There have always been lots of books in their homes too and their parents set them a good example by reading a lot themselves.

My Squidoo lens about some of my favourite children’s literature:
Classic Funny Poems for Kids
The Dark is Rising Sequence
The Wind in the Willows
Richmal Crompton, author of the William books

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