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- From: gaillard@panix.com (Ed Gaillard)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.poems
- Subject: Re: STORM
- Message-ID: <1992Dec26.212222.4684@panix.com>
- Date: 26 Dec 92 21:22:22 GMT
- References: <GOROKHO1.92Dec25042622@husc10.harvard.edu>
- Organization: Radio Free Hades
- Lines: 99
-
- gorokho1@husc10.harvard.edu (Zhenya Gorokhovsky) writes:
-
- >Here's another poem. Whoever cares, please comment.
- >Happy holidays to all.
-
- I like it. I have a couple of technical criticisms, which I'll insert
- in the poem, and some questions about the style, which I'll append.
-
- > STORM
- >
- > At whose oblique request,
- > conclusive as it nears,
- > avenging whose suppressed
- > tart mutinies of tears,
-
- > unstifling whose lament,
- > assaulting whose terrain?
- > A monstrous laundromat,
- I'm not sure you want to use an off-rhyme here. Since the first
- stanza had perfect rhyme, the reader expects more of the same;
- otherwise you give the impression of not having control of the form.
- It would actually be better if you had an off-rhyme in the *first*
- stanza, I think; your reader would then be expecting more of them.
- You can also use off-rhymes later in the poem, after the rhyme-scheme
- is firmly established in the reader's mind. Your mileage may vary.
- > abetted by the brain.
-
- > On the soaked city plan
- > some districts still persist,
- > so pert and soi-disant,
- > so distant through the mist.
-
- > The grey dominion forms
- > an atmospheric gap;
- > vast chunks of Harvard dorms
- > are swallowed from the map
-
- > as lightnings from above
- > perform the first sortie
- > of self-inflicted love
- > with vibrant cruelty.
- Not a good rhyme. This is an identical rhyme, *and* it depends on the
- theoretical secondary stress on the last syllable of cruelty. One of
- these flaws might be OK by this point in the poem; but both in one
- rhyme is a little too much.
-
- > A welcome cleansing mess
- > blasts from the baffled vault:
- > surely a careless
- The meter is rough: "SUREly (a) CAREless" has a headless first foot,
- and either a pyrrhic or an unnatural stress on "a" in the second foot,
- and then a trochee in the last foot, with the rhyme coming on an
- unstressed syllable. Again, I think this is more variation from your
- form then you want in a single line.
- > ill-shaven angel's fault.
-
- > Teenagerly, revealed
- > through shifting sheets of spray,
- > resplendent to a field
- > of hesitant dismay,
-
- > he spells and celebrates
- > a silver-melting glow.
- > Through him reverberates
- This rhyme depends entirely on secondary stresses.
- > the perfect vertigo.
-
- > A chain of sparks ignites
- > from an initial flame.
- > Quintillions of lights.
- This doesn't scan right. "Quintillions " has only three syllables,
- and the line has only two stresses. How about "Quintillions of white
- lights" or "A million billion lights"?
- > Abandonment of shame.
-
-
- As I said, I have a couple of questions about the style. The poem is
- sometimes obscure - for example, it is not clear to me what
- "resplendent to a field/of hesitant dismay" really means, or what is
- meant by an "atmospheric gap", or why the districts on the map are
- "pert and soi-disant". These don't create any clear image or idea in
- my mind. The language in the rest of the poem is very clever, but
- pretty clear. Anyway, if you didn't *intend* those passages to be a
- little obscure, you might want to re-think them. Or perhaps I'm just
- being dense.
-
- Lastly, what is that "monstrous laundromat" doing in lines 7-8? Why
- is it "abetted by the brain"? Is it intended as the answer to the
- questions of lines 1-6? (The "ill-shaven angel" seems to be the real
- answer, yes?) Once again, you may decide I've just missed something
- obvious.
-
- Anyway, good poem. You showed nice control of the meter, except in
- the two lines indicated, and clever ideas; I especially like the image
- of the rain falling on the map.
-
- -ed g.
- <gaillard@panix.com>
- "It is much easier to be critical than to be correct." - Disraeli
-