He composed many short poems (haiku):
His most well-known composition is a setting of Lawrence Binyon's poem, "For the Fallen", composed in 1971 for the Choir of Westminster Abbey.
A poem called "The Cross," composed in his honor, paints a scene of laughing heathens who beheaded the young soldier when he defied them.
The first source is the poem "Pos Peire d'Alvernh' a chantat" composed by the troubadour monk of Montaudon in 1195.
Aeolic poems may be stichic (with all lines having the same metrical form), or composed in more elaborate stanzas or strophes.
Back in his native Ossetia, he became a prominent poet, whose poems composed in Ossetic quickly spread throughout Ossetian towns and villages in an oral form.
The poem as recorded was likely composed in the 8th or 9th century.
While he stayed at the school's sanatorium recovering from illness, Coleridge wrote the poem "Pain: Composed in Sickness".
Heroic poem The Battle of Maldon composed.
And Wislawa Szymborska's poem "The Terrorist, He's Watching," composed a quarter of a century ago, came to look like a premonition.