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Poem #18
Posted: Thu Jan 27, 2005 3:17 am
by Joe Way
Life fades
She hides
beneath desperation
incapable
Sees fractured
brutal dismantling?
Yes
the crushing, crackling insight
as thorn outlasts rose.
Then, tattooed upon her heart
duty, love, pain
now fading
fading
Sidelined
sighing
sightless
too damaged to grasp
the promised palm of spring
Harken,
peals outstripping flower bells
as snow
silently removes her tread
from a road that outruns her pace
Naught, but wait
wait
wait
Aloneness, lost, losing
shivering seasoned flesh
A scraggy gourd past using
for winter is nature’s scourge
clearing the path.
Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2005 7:59 pm
by Joe Way
While there are other phrases to admire in this poem, "a scraggy gourd past" has wonderful sonics. I'm not of the specific meaning that this phrase has in the final stanza. Is it a description of the "voices" past? Or is it an object that is being used to clear the path?
The language and atmosphere is rich, but the clarity needs a bit of refocusing.
Joe
Posted: Thu Feb 03, 2005 11:37 pm
by Critic2
Life fades
She hides
beneath desperation
incapable
Sees fractured
brutal dismantling?
Yes
the crushing, crackling insight
as thorn outlasts rose.
the rhythm is fractured to match your imagery
Then, tattooed upon her heart
duty, love, pain
now fading
fading
I wouldn't have gone for the repeat fading
Sidelined
sighing
sightless
too damaged to grasp
the promised palm of spring
I don't offer a hand to your "promised palm", sorry
Harken,
peals outstripping flower bells
as snow
silently removes her tread
from a road that outruns her pace
"naughty boys' corner" for "harken". come out when you are ready to say sorry! (btw I am ready already to say sorry, sorry, if you are a "girl", check it and let me know. if still in doubt then Joe has a gender agenda on his judging cv)
Naught, but wait
wait
wait
to the "naught boys' corner" for...."naught"
Aloneness, lost, losing
shivering seasoned flesh
A scraggy gourd past using
for winter is nature’s scourge
clearing the path.
way better!
this has promise, spend some time with it but cut out the poetic talk!
Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 7:25 pm
by Byron
Joe Way wrote:While there are other phrases to admire in this poem, "a scraggy gourd past" has wonderful sonics. I'm not of the specific meaning that this phrase has in the final stanza. Is it a description of the "voices" past? Or is it an object that is being used to clear the path?
The language and atmosphere is rich, but the clarity needs a bit of refocusing.
Joe
C'est moi.
The gourd is an old hollow fruit that is now past its uses. It is also past any possible use for the coming winter. The winter gales will blow anything away that is not tethered down and this old gourd will not survive the winter.
Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 7:28 pm
by Byron
Critic2 wrote:Life fades
She hides
beneath desperation
incapable
Sees fractured
brutal dismantling?
Yes
the crushing, crackling insight
as thorn outlasts rose.
the rhythm is fractured to match your imagery
Then, tattooed upon her heart
duty, love, pain
now fading
fading
I wouldn't have gone for the repeat fading
Sidelined
sighing
sightless
too damaged to grasp
the promised palm of spring
I don't offer a hand to your "promised palm", sorry. I agree!!
Harken,
peals outstripping flower bells
as snow
silently removes her tread
from a road that outruns her pace
"naughty boys' corner" for "harken". come out when you are ready to say sorry! I agree here as well !!
Naught, but wait
wait
wait
to the "naught boys' corner" for...."naught" Likewise, I agree!
Aloneness, lost, losing
shivering seasoned flesh
A scraggy gourd past using
for winter is nature’s scourge
clearing the path.
way better! I thought so too.
this has promise, spend some time with it but cut out the poetic talk!
Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 8:15 pm
by Critic2
ok, so it's you Byron. then why are you in the naughty *girls'* corner? come out immediately and revise this promising poem!!
Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 8:33 am
by tom.d.stiller
Oh Michael, John's never in the girls' corner
I hope I didn't betray any secrets..
Posted: Mon Feb 07, 2005 4:16 pm
by witty_owl
This poem appears as the personification of death as winter/winter as death. Many of the poems on this topic have used the simile of winter as death and winter as lonliness. This poem alludes to both and suggests further that death is a release from life's traumas. Also the morals and emotions that may shape one's life such as "duty, love, pain" become meaning less at the threshold of death. And when all seems as if life comes to nothing the writer reminds us that death/winter must perform its task to make way for new life.
Cheers, Witty.
Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2005 1:10 am
by Byron
Thanks witty. I wanted to get inside the skin and fear of one old person.
The bones are brittle and broken. The skin is shrivelled and of no use to anyone. The heart failing to remember the burdens that life put on its owner. The fact that she is going on an inevitable journey, on her own. She has to make this journey without human companions or even the memory of what companionship meant. Totally alone.
At the end of her life she is no more than the dead flesh, dead memories, dead life, that will be swept aside by Winter.
We could say that Winter is cruel. However, we cannot fight the inevitable and we must not forget that we arrived thanks to Winter's offspring, (Pun intended)