Dear Mr. Brown

Discussion in 'U.K.' started by nynysuts, Oct 21, 2008.

  1. nynysuts

    nynysuts No Gods, No Masters

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    ‘What will we do?’ A father cries
    Glancing back at his house with tears in his eyes
    ‘it’s not my fault I don’t have a job
    They’ve laid us all off, even old Bob’

    His children are young, too young to know
    Why their mother looks at them so
    She keeps a brave face when she takes them to school
    Then cries and hits the hostel wall

    In the street people moan about inflation
    Say a recession is heading for the nation
    Worry only about the price of bread
    Not the families barely fed

    He goes to the job centre every day
    Anger in his eyes as they turn him away
    ‘can’t you see your not the only one?
    Go on the dole and leave, be gone!’

    With rumbling stomachs the children wait
    For their Mother to put food on their plate
    Instead she drinks a liquid lunch
    And raises a toast to the credit crunch

    Mr. Brown and Mr. Darling listen here
    We’re not heading for a crisis, it’s already here
    Are you cosy behind that big black door?
    Away from the cries of ‘we need more!’

    It’s happened before, it’s happening again
    So please don’t look surprised when
    The people protest, stand up and be counted
    This is to what your country has amounted.

    I think it needs a bit of work, comments please :)
     
  2. verseau_miracle

    verseau_miracle Banned

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    Metre definitely needs a bit of work (is metre the word Im looking for?) and theres a bit of awkard rhyming, but I enjoyed it. I found the last line didnt flow so well but that could be me and my silly brain. It has the right message to end on though. The image of them being behind a big black door was a good one to use as thats exactly how I imagine it, all tucked away from the reality and all that stuff

    What am I saying, Im waffling. Its good stuff but does need some touching up as you say:) No further advice though, as you can see Im not much of a languagey poety person:pNot anymore anyway
     
  3. nynysuts

    nynysuts No Gods, No Masters

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    I need to work on the rhythm mainly, I'm thinking of changing the last lines to:
    The people protest, it won't just be a few
    Don't forget the country belongs to us, not you.
     
  4. opel diamond

    opel diamond burn out

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    ny, i really like your poem, it needs a bit of fine tuning but its awesome. i like your sig more though :D ace.
     
  5. nynysuts

    nynysuts No Gods, No Masters

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    Hehe thanks, I stole it from someone's sig on another forum :eek::
     
  6. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    The message of the poem is an angry one, it's accusatory and should be spat with vitriol. The rhyme scheme, however, makes it seem too jovial, almost like a nursery rhyme, which can work if you're William Blake, but here I think it's the wrong medium for the message. I agree the current rhyme seems slightly awkward, which is to do with the beat, how many syllables you have on each line. But rather than work on the syllables, I think you should break the rigid rhyme scheme, allow some here and there, perhaps, but don't let it interfere with your message. It's a problem I've had in the past writing political poetry. To emphasise the anger and the passion in this, try writing it free-form, abandon constraints of rhyme and let the power in the voice carry it....
     
  7. nynysuts

    nynysuts No Gods, No Masters

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    ‘What will we do?’ A father cries
    Glancing back at his house with tears in his eyes
    ‘It’s not my fault I don’t have a job
    They’ve laid us all off, even old Bob’

    His children are young, too young to know
    Why their mother looks at them so
    She keeps a brave face when she takes them to school
    Then cries and feels the world is cruel.

    In the street people moan about inflation
    Say a recession is heading for the nation
    Worry only about the price of bread
    Not the families barely fed

    He goes to the job centre every day
    Anger in his eyes as they turn him away
    ‘Can’t you see you’re not the only one?
    Go on the dole, our job is done!’

    With rumbling stomachs the children wait
    For their Mother to put food on their plate
    Instead she drinks a liquid lunch
    And raises a toast to the credit crunch

    Mr. Brown and Mr. Darling listen here
    We’re not heading for a crisis, it’s already here
    Are you cosy behind that big black door?
    Away from the cries of ‘we need more!’

    It’s happened before, it’s happening again
    So don’t look too surprised when
    The people protest, and it won't be a few
    This country belongs to us, not you.

    That's the second rhyme scheme draft but I do prefer writing freeform so I'll have a stab at that now, I just know that will work better.
     
  8. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    I'd like to see it free-form. You can still include rhymes here and there to add poignancy, the last lines for example, with the few and the accusatory you. By stripping away the rigid rhyme scheme, the inclusion of an infrequent rhyme, as with the above example, adds power, like a pointed finger. Its value comes in its scarcity....
     
  9. nynysuts

    nynysuts No Gods, No Masters

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    A father looking back at what he lost
    His job, his house, his life
    Tries to stay strong for his family
    Cries silently in the dark

    The children are young and innocent
    They don’t understand
    Why their mummy’s never happy
    And daddy’s always home

    They talk about inflation in the streets
    A recession headed this way
    Complain when the price of bread goes up
    And when petrol’s over a pound

    The children wait for the smell of food
    Their stomach’s rumbling
    Their mother knocks back a liquid lunch
    And takes out some beans

    Mr. brown and Mr. darling, listen to us
    Poverty is rife all over
    People are losing their jobs and homes
    Losing the will to live

    Ten years ago it was just the same
    It’s happening again.
    The people will rise up, protest
    This is our country.

    I'm not really sure about the from of it but it's a start. I think if I'm going to freefrom it properly I need to read the Sun newspaper and get angry again :rolleyes:
     
  10. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    The new one seems less forced, but at the same time seems a bit flatter. Really go for the jugular! Punk it up!
     
  11. Bonsai Ent

    Bonsai Ent Member

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    I think I do prefer the newest less rhyme-y version,
    It feels like you're getting your words out much easier, and letting your feelings shape the poem, rather than the poem shape your feelings
     
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