Grimface Insultbear, on 17 April 2009 - 12:49 PM, said:
A Moon Not Rising
The Lord of my child is dead, my child drowned
in darkness unyielding.
I have been murdered, my gardens gone.
My body trembles.
Gasping for air I don’t (even) breathe.
Virulent waves of power shreds my skin.
I bleed dust,
my screams unheard, my pain unfelt.
Power ever draws power.
This time, too much was drawn.
Flesh falls from me in chunks,
hurtling down on my shadow’s smooth skin,
not pitted and gouged like mine.
I rain, like my child rained, blood
and destruction upon you.
Unwillingly, I set your world on fire.
One by one, I watch your gardens die.
I smile, knowing that in dying
I am not alone.
As I fall, dying,
I know I’m not alone.
But whom will I pray my soul to take?
At what gates will I arrive?
I saw Death walk your mortal streets,
blue fire shone in his pits.
What fools gods are, to meddle with mortal men.
I can see him no longer.
I have seen it.
My end is not the end,
merely the beginning.
And when my sister rises, you must prepare yourselves.
War is coming.
Some thoughts, if I may. It is an odd structure, the six stanzas of unequal line length - for me, a poem must have definition in the structure of both or it's technically not a poem (unless there is a good, creative reason otherwise). You do manage to break three times mid-sentence to draw me on, but why just those three times? I don't get any rhythm from the work and there are few, if any rhymes (full, assonantal, consonantal or otherwise) that I can pick up (which may of course be intentional).
You do have some nice alliterations and the imagery is strong, if, perhaps, a little lost in impact - a drowned child, bleeding dust and falling flesh are such. Forgive me if this all sounds a little harsh, and I am perfectly willing to admit I am no poetry expert (a budding amateur) but whilst this is a nice story with some strong imagery, it is not, to my eyes and ears, a poem as such. Of course many may disagree but I can see a number of ways in which re-writing, imposition of structure with attention to line, breaks, stanza, rhyming, theme, perhaps rhythm and some fresh images would make it so.
If anything I recognise that there is scope within the art for free verse and what might seem a more natural flow of the voice and I would be more willing to accept it as such if there was more evidence of the rest of the stuff I mentioned.
Just my humble opinion.
EDIT - I just looked back over the last couple of pages and I see that you already know all this stuff? Thus, I am very curious about what you have done with this poem.
This post has been edited by Fist Gamet: 26 February 2011 - 01:20 AM