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secondhanddreampoet
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since 2006-11-07
Posts 6394
a 'Universalist' !

0 posted 2008-03-05 08:25 PM


      Winter Passing (#2)

I shall miss …

shadow-drenched dreams
trifling with snowflakes
in the pale forest sunlight

the setting sun flaming out
with the touch of frozen mere
and icy mountain tops

the intense clarion purity
  of evening bells
and crisp-sparkling snow
in the melancholy moonlight

fine ‘book and candle’ memories
etched by dancing firelight

each winter lover and friend...
who will never pass this way again

     --- b. e. adams (3/5/08)

[This message has been edited by secondhanddreampoet (03-05-2008 09:00 PM).]

© Copyright 2008 Bruce E. Adams Jr. - All Rights Reserved
Midnitesun
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Gaia
1 posted 2008-03-05 09:06 PM


"shadow-drenched dreams
trifling with snowflakes
in the pale forest sunlight"
Love the idea of 'trifling' dreams!

LadyTom
Member
since 2008-02-29
Posts 353
LA, CA
2 posted 2008-03-05 09:07 PM


My dear poet, how sentimental!!!!How incurable Romanticism!!!!

Such a beautiful poem. If we could live in the past, do we still want future? Do we believe future could be better?

(You started missing winter when it is still here. ah, you shall Blame yourself for your heart has been warmed up by the dream of young spring. )

Huan Yi
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since 2004-10-12
Posts 6688
Waukegan
3 posted 2008-03-05 09:10 PM


.

"I shall miss …"

Lose this line . . .
You're under now obligation
to lead anyone by the hand

John


.


Artic Wind
Member Rara Avis
since 2007-09-16
Posts 8080
Realm of Supernatural
4 posted 2008-03-05 09:15 PM


the setting sun flaming out
with the touch of frozen mere
and icy mountain tops............."

By far the most lovely Poem you have written!



ARCTIC WIND

SEA
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with you
5 posted 2008-03-05 09:29 PM


completely beautiful!
Alison
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6 posted 2008-03-05 11:29 PM


Beautifully written, Bruce.

Alison

Marchmadness
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since 2007-09-16
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So. El Monte, California
7 posted 2008-03-06 03:24 AM


Beautiful, makes one want to keep spring at bay for a while longer.
                                 Ida

ArtSolstice
Member
since 2007-03-18
Posts 498

8 posted 2008-03-06 08:08 PM


I respectfully disagree with John. Your opening line, Poet, is unusual for your writes. Very seldom does one see you put yourself in the picture you paint with your words. In landscape painting, the artist often includes at least a single figure to give the viewer a sense of scale, otherwise we might not know how high the trees are, how steep the cliff, or how dramatically wide the river. So too, in this write. By putting yourself in the frame, the reader may get a sense of scale for those things you will miss in proportion to your presence. Greatly enjoyed.


secondhanddreampoet
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since 2006-11-07
Posts 6394
a 'Universalist' !
9 posted 2008-03-06 08:27 PM


For me, this 'write' was an intensely 'personal' suite of impressions
rather than what is likely my more typical, humble attempts to express
the 'universal'... I have to lean toward Ms. "ArtSolstice's" opinion pursuant
to the inclusion of that 1st. line on this one.

Huan Yi
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since 2004-10-12
Posts 6688
Waukegan
10 posted 2008-03-06 08:29 PM


.


"you put yourself in the picture "


That is my problem with the line . . .


John


.

ArtSolstice
Member
since 2007-03-18
Posts 498

11 posted 2008-03-06 08:31 PM


Huan Yi, is it not true that some Zen paintings include people?
Huan Yi
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since 2004-10-12
Posts 6688
Waukegan
12 posted 2008-03-06 08:33 PM


.


All, as each, not just one only . . .


.

Robert E. Jordan
Member Rara Avis
since 2008-01-25
Posts 8541
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
13 posted 2008-03-06 11:36 PM


Secondhanddreampoet,

I’m afraid I’m not a winter lover, and winter has never been my friend.  Winter is a time of misery and suffering.  That said; why will the winter lover and friend never pass that way again?  That would be sad.  I suppose I don’t fully understand.  There is so much I don’t understand.  I suspect I’ll be forever in the dark, concerning winter.  I do remember kind people, and good times in the winter.  That was long ago.

Bobby

ArtSolstice
Member
since 2007-03-18
Posts 498

14 posted 2008-03-07 07:10 PM


John,

I do not understand your post. The real question is, “Is it a good poem?”  I believe it is.

“Whose woods these are I think I know”
“I have been one acquainted with the night”
“I heard a fly buzz when I died”
“I wake to sleep and take my waking slow”

We all know who wrote these. There’s no need to list the authors. There is no objective rule that say one can not use “I”.  Pythagoras tells us that “Man is the measure of all things.”  Thoreau and Emerson wrote about nature and used the word “I”.  They put themselves in the picture. There is always a point of view, which means there is always an “I” (human eye/mind) present.  Because we look at the universe from a point of view, a human point of view.

Kant says that space and time are human constructs. Poetry and art are also human constructs. One can not take the human element out of it, because there is a self-consciousness about creating art.  Art is often about mutability, loss, change, which has to do with a perspective and a self. What is mutable? We are. “I” am.

Great poetry is often personal and universal at the same time, and that personal is the “I”. It is valuable because in writing it, one gets to one’s essence, gets to what is true and authentic – the way WindWalker, Midnitesun, and this Poet do. That authentic self is what people go to poetry to experience.

Just my humble opinion, respectfully submitted.  I still think this is a fine poem, and I wouldn’t change a thing about it.

Margherita
Member Seraphic
since 2003-02-08
Posts 22236
Eternity
15 posted 2008-03-07 07:30 PM


the intense clarion purity
  of evening bells
and crisp-sparkling snow
in the melancholy moonlight


This just pierced my heart with its beauty.

Love.
Margherita

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