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THEMAGICALMYSTRYOFPOEMS
New Member
since 2004-04-01
Posts 9
arizona

0 posted 2004-04-12 06:44 PM


A NIGHT WITH A POET

To meet a poet
In the dark of night
Who opens your heart
And adds to your insight
Is a true gift
One can imagine

I sat there and read
I sat there and cried
Feeling as tho I was
Right by their side

Feeling their pain
Feeling their gifts
Of someone who shares
With someone who cares

Late into the night
Til we saw sunlight
Seeing their unicorns
Running freely about
I even felt the breeze
From the butterfly wings

It all seems so real
When you have shared
A night with a poet



© Copyright 2004 Marilyn Ciptak - All Rights Reserved
forne_marin
Member
since 2004-04-13
Posts 140
Spartanburg, South Carolina
1 posted 2004-04-19 10:11 AM


Okay, I don't like leaving poems unanswered, especially in this forum, so I'm going to give yours a shot.

First off, you need to decide whether you're doing free verse or rhyming. You can't sit on the fence. Lyrical rhyming poetry is a very unforgiving art.

That being said, I'm thinking about changing my handle to "itsallaboutrhythm", because that's what I believe. Rhythm is the "heartbeat" of a poem, and your rhythm could use some work. So unless I state otherwise, all of the proposed changes are to smooth out the metrical rhythm of the poem.

Stanza one, line four, I'd change "And adds to your insight" to "a true insight".

Stanza two, line four should be changed to "Right there by their side".

Stanza four needs the most work. In line 3, you should drop "their", and line 4 needs to be completely reworked. I'm run though it six or seven times and I just can't make the meter work. So far you have (including my edit) the following: (I've put the stressed syllables in bold.

Late | in- | to | the | night
Til
| we | saw | sun- | light
See-
| ing | u- | ni- | corns
Run-
| ning | free- | ly | a- | bout

Thus you have an extra syllable in line four. I don't know what to suggest on this one, but you need to rework it.

The last stanza is slightly metrically different from the rest of the poem, but I think that can be used to your advantage to help drive your point home. I'd move the words "a night" from the beginning of line 3 to the end of line 2. Thus it keeps both lines one and two of stanza five metrically symetrical with the rest of the poem, but makes the last line stand out more because it is asymetrical. Drives your point home a little stronger, I think.

Good poem, though. Nice images. I enjoyed it.

But the most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I'm the only one!

gourdmad
Member
since 2003-12-01
Posts 136
Upper Ohio Valley
2 posted 2004-04-19 12:30 PM



>To meet a poet
In the dark of night
Who opens your heart
And adds to your insight
Is a true gift
One can imagine<

teh last two lines of his stanza are dissonant. Maybe:

Is the truest gift
One can imagine

or at least a comma

Is a true gift,
One can imagine

or

Is a true gift
of imagination

or something, but not as it stands.

the closing was weak

>It all seems so real
When you have shared
A night with a poet<


I think it needs a major reworking, but if not, here are some minor suggestions:

It all seemed so real
When you have shared
A night with a poet

It all seems so real
When you share
A night with a poet

It all seems real;
shared night with a poet

what exactly were you sharing? that is an act between two people in my mind - what did the poet get from you?

rainydaymusic
Junior Member
since 2004-01-14
Posts 26

3 posted 2004-04-22 08:17 PM


I think it's a sentiment that should be expressed, you know, this gratitude towards great writers - and that certainly comes across in the poem.  If that's what you wanted to accomplish, then you did it well.  There's a sweet tone to the poem.  

But I agree with the first reply, that is, it could use some rhythm.. it seems to me that there aren't any pauses.  It just goes on and on until you get the end.  Put a few pauses in there to give the reader a chance to think about the words you just said.  

hush
Senior Member
since 2001-05-27
Posts 1653
Ohio, USA
4 posted 2004-04-27 12:24 PM


'First off, you need to decide whether you're doing free verse or rhyming. You can't sit on the fence.'

I disagree with this statement. Haven't you ever read Emily Dickinson? It's all about the intention of deviating from the rhyme scheme (and, of course, the skill with which you pull it off.)

I see your point, and I think what you're saying (at least what I'm seeing) is that this poem seems to have been written with rhyming intent, and when the authordidn't have a rhyme, she just wrote whatever fit.

I think that's better than forcing some godawful rhyme.

Magical, I will say that I think the rhymes you used were kind of simplistic. I think to really show homage to great writers, you may want to consider using some references and a little more complicated language, like adding some imagery and descriptions.

But you didn't force a rigid rhyme scheme. That's a good thing.

Hope I've helped.

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