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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Laid to Rest (Revised II) (Read 106 times)
duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #30 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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dericlee wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:
Ouch...that aches, and brings tears.

I have to disagree with earlier nits about 'person'...I thought the variation lent itself perfectly to the quality of disassociation such pain must carry.  

Thanks for the comment on that. . .yes, that is true and interesting. . .the certain amount of disassociation that comes with such an experience. . .

As with so much of your work, the image is clear long before the intended revelation, which does absolutely nothing to spoil the denoument.  It carries.  Concernng the revisions...there's little to choose between them.  You've smoothed things a bit, yes...but it did as well, rough and jagged as the emotions it evoked.

I do like the "smoothing out" of certain things. . .but appreciate your feeling the jagged and rough. . .I dunno as I read this more. . .maybe it's a combo of the two.

Just the thoughts of an old redneck...offered alongside his tears.

One of the dearest rednecks I know. . .and appreciate. . .thanks for sharing my tears, Cowboy. . .

good to see you on for a bit as always.  My love to Vicki!

Ren


  
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dericlee
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #29 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Ouch...that aches, and brings tears.

I have to disagree with earlier nits about 'person'...I thought the variation lent itself perfectly to the quality of disassociation such pain must carry.   

As with so much of your work, the image is clear long before the intended revelation, which does absolutely nothing to spoil the denoument.  It carries.  Concernng the revisions...there's little to choose between them.  You've smoothed things a bit, yes...but it did as well, rough and jagged as the emotions it evoked.

Just the thoughts of an old redneck...offered alongside his tears.
  
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duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #28 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Shane. . .it is good to see you on the board again. . .and I do mean "see" you. . .

a face to go with oh so many years of sharing and learning.  *smile*

Thank you for reading. . .it is a compliment to be "in the company" of my poetic sister Melinda. . .whose words have always been laced with such grace and beauty.

You're welcome.

~Ren~
  
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KerrinScott
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #27 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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There is sadness and certainty here, Ren.

I find it harder these days to comment and critique certain pieces that touch me in the deep, unlit portions of myself.

I turned away after the penultimate line...

I didn't need to read on to know.

in a near barren cove
where sand crept from the shore --

hours sifted

and all of life was washed
back into the sea.

Only you and Melinda (Serenem) ever cause me pain when I read you. I appreciate that.

Shane
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duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #26 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Don wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:
Hi ~Ren~,

I've attempted to follow the thread of discourse and found wanting.  I like your latest and honestly congratulate your poetic take of a very difficult subject to present.  I like the ocean where all life supposedly came from and supposedly eventually returns. 

Your images nuance a very heavy subject and lend a necessary light touch.

~~Don~~


Not sure what you meant by "found wanting" Don. . .but I appreciate your stepping back in and offering further comment.  Sometimes even the heaviest of subjects. . .approached with the love that will always remain. . .bring in the Light.  . .

and I tend to seek. . .light.  *smile*

~Ren~
  
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duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #25 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Lucy wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:

Wish I had the expertise to critique this properly.  I don't often come to Firebox, but your title intrigued me.  The reading of it touched me deeply.  I've never lost a child, but know many others who have.  It must be a terribly painful emotional experience.  Thanks for posting.  I have no nits.  Lucy


Hello Lucy ~  Expertise to crit properly. . .while there may be many people out there who would come at this very "academically". . .with great "literary opinion". . .it is sometimes the reactions of those who observe from an every day perspective that can offer us the greatest insight not only into our work. . .but into our selves. . .

In other words -- don't cut yourself short. . .your comments on the poetry as well as the life-experience have value.  Thank you for stopping by. . .feel free to offer anything else that comes to mind. . .

I won't deny the experience as painful -- it is -- and it continues to offer painful twinges. . .and yet. . .the knowing (and seeing, there was an ultrasound) of her. . .remains joyous. . .she's out there. . .she was and she is.  *soft smile*

~Ren~
  
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Don
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #24 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Hi ~Ren~,

I've attempted to follow the thread of discourse and found wanting.  I like your latest and honestly congratulate your poetic take of a very difficult subject to present.  I like the ocean where all life supposedly came from and supposedly eventually returns. 

Your images nuance a very heavy subject and lend a necessary light touch.

~~Don~~
  
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Lucy
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #23 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Wish I had the expertise to critique this properly.  I don't often come to Firebox, but your title intrigued me.  The reading of it touched me deeply.  I've never lost a child, but know many others who have.  It must be a terribly painful emotional experience.  Thanks for posting.  I have no nits.  Lucy
  
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Just_Daniel
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #22 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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ah... well, duh...

somehow I had had my attention shifted to fhe father... and I was thinking of HIS father's brow!  LOL

It's all very clear now.   Lips Sealed
  
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duetsdove
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Re: Wonderful revision!
Reply #21 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Just_Daniel wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:
Forgive my late-coming to this venue... as I often am overwhelmed by all the commentary, so in this case I mostly skipped it.

Hi Daniel, thanks for stopping. . .and skipping all the commentary is fine by me. . .*smile*

You have a wonderful piece of work here, Ren... the ebb and flow of the physical and emotional tides mixing with the ocean and taking her with it to swim freely among the Mer maidens.

Thanks. . .it's nice to envision that. . .her swimming among the Mer maidens. . .very nice, seems to fit.

There is mystery in "of your father's brow" !

Is there?  Her father doesn't do well with "things that go wrong". . .and anxiety causes him to sweat, become light-headed. . .etc. . .

Thanks again for stopping by Daniel

~ren~



Lightly, Daniel  8)

  
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Just_Daniel
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Wonderful revision!
Reply #20 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Forgive my late-coming to this venue... as I often am overwhelmed by all the commentary, so in this case I mostly skipped it.

You have a wonderful piece of work here, Ren... the ebb and flow of the physical and emotional tides mixing with the ocean and taking her with it to swim freely among the Mer maidens.

There is mystery in "of your father's brow" !

Lightly, Daniel  8)
  
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azurepoetry
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #19 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Ren,

I'm flattered by your kind words. You can tell me to go take a flying leap without being so nice...really...lol.

The "I was" was not the strongest substitution I could offer, just the fastest...besides, I'm guilty of over-doing rewrites in crits and I'm trying to cut back on that (doctor's orders).

~Tim

(Edited in: icepoet you have a pleasant sense of rhythm and meter that brings additional depth to the poem's crit)
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duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #18 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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icepoet wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:
deutsdove:

I like this revision much better.  You've incorporated some recommendations, yet retained your original intents for the poem.

Hello -- thanks for your comments. . .I do have a third revision going up soon. . .then I think it will rest for a while.

As I read it, there seemed to be an "ebb and flow" to the sentences; some smooth and other's short (drawing back) - which gave the feel of a sea tide's action (and what was occuring in the womb).  I felt it was a outstanding way for the reader to experience that ebb and flow, since the ocean plays a major part in your poem.  

Yes. . .the line breaks do tend to offer that feel. . .thanks for picking that up and pointing that out.  The ocean tends to make its appearance in many of my poems. . .but poignantly appropriate here.

Thanks again.

~Ren~


icepoet

  
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icepoet
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #17 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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deutsdove:

I like this revision much better.  You've incorporated some recommendations, yet retained your original intents for the poem.

As I read it, there seemed to be an "ebb and flow" to the sentences; some smooth and other's short (drawing back) - which gave the feel of a sea tide's action (and what was occuring in the womb).  I felt it was a outstanding way for the reader to experience that ebb and flow, since the ocean plays a major part in your poem.   

icepoet
  
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duetsdove
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Re: Laid to Rest (Revised II)
Reply #16 - Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am
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Tim wrote on Jan 1st, 1970 at 12:00am:
Hello Ren,

Seems like a while since I've read one of your poems in Firebox. Let me just talk about the recent incarnation of this piece, and please permit me to be more succinct than I'd care to be, because I'm borrowing a computer in a cafe---still without the access to the internet at home...grrr....

Hey Tim!  So good to go over a crit from you. . .and I can understand how maddening it is to still be without internet access at your home.

Lines like 'hours sifted' or the aural play (I forget the term) of sea and seed at the end that capture my attention fully, regarding this sad event. My advise is lose the first line.

Yikes!  OMG!  Lose the first line?  *smile*  I have to say that was my reaction at first. . .but

May I be direct and break protocol for a moment? Your opening lines always move toward startling the reader to capture their interest, which is good; but, this time I feel too much is being told ahead of time and all the rest of the poem is doing is explaining what was summarily told to me in the very beginning without a significant twist or additional revelation at the end. 

I can see where you are coming from. . .and I actually warmed up to the idea. . .of whacking that off. . .you are as right as you usually are about where my poems should end.  *smile*

Consider omitting the first line and start with 'My hand...". To do this would mean you'd have to add an equivalent verb in the first line to reset the grammar correctly.

I am going to omit it. . .and am working on changing up the rest of the first stanza to flow into the syntax properly.

I rewrote S2 using all of your words, contracting just a little---perhaps the delicacy you were going for is lost and impact is too strong---you decide. I didn't see the strong tie with wearing shorts and the preceived duality of warmth with the day's temperature and the N's struggle, perhaps I'm a little too specific. See below, please.

I'm still not sold on omitting "I was". . .but will contemplate it. . .


My hand was too small
to contain the wellspring
of an ocean
with its caress
of navel and bloom.

It was warm that day, sunny. 
Wearing shorts, I lay 
cramping on the couch, knowing

the dam had broken;
blood mixed with the sweat
of your father's brow
and my tears

for a princess conceived too late
in a cove where sand 
crept in from the shore --

hours sifted

and all of life was washed
back into the sea

to flower among the Mer.


Again, I feel nit-picky, but near-barren seems to be doing the work of cove and the invading sand---or am I missing something else? I see the metaphor stronger with the cove adjective-less. 

As married as I was to near-barren. . .I agree. . .it reads more smoothly the way you wrote it.

Otherwise, beautiful and exacting in the lovely rhythms I've come to know as your signature. I should know better than to touch your balanced poems, but I just can't help myself. In the end, the rule stays the same: lose or use. 

Thanks, Tim. . .spot on as you always are. . .appreciate it!

Be well, peace unto you and your's

And to you and yours as well. . .be well!

~Ren~

~Tim

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