Night Walk

Discussion in 'Poetry' started by weaselpop, Jun 30, 2008.

  1. weaselpop

    weaselpop Member

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    Tonight
    The night
    Is full
    Of young spring lovers.

    The moon is dampened
    With a gauze of pollution.

    Faces are undefined from a lack of light
    And blurred
    From an excess of study.

    A girl with waist long hair rises on her toes,
    Momentarily,
    In anticipation of
    Someone.

    A bicycle creaks by.

    In front of the library
    Globes of light
    Border the grass,
    Fresh cut that afternoon.

    You carry half a watermelon in your hands.

    The bare flesh of
    The cut face faces upwards.

    The thick smooth skin
    Pushes its weight
    Against your palms,
    Rounded
    Like a skull.
     
  2. JethBroh

    JethBroh VikingAmbasador

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    :hat::cheers2:
     
  3. teh-horace

    teh-horace for your pleasure

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    here is my workshop of your poem:

    make the first three lines one line, "tonight the night is full"

    merge the two first stanzas together, "tonight the night is full/ of young spring lovers./ the moon is dampened/ by a gauze of pollution" - two contradicting images "young lovers" "damp pollution" introducing the poem, sets the tone

    take unnecessary words out of third stanza: "a" "an"

    fourth stanza: watch your line integrity, i'd try: A girl with waist long hair/ rises on her toes, momentarily,/ in anticipation of someone.

    i like "a bicycle creaks by." on its own line, it interrupts the scene, just as it does in reading it, it works

    fifth stanza (after bike): love it, the first line "in front of the library" plays off the bike line well, and the rest is just a good simple image, sensory.

    sixth: try, "you carry a half cut watermelon/ in your hands. the bare flesh of the cut face/ faces upward." -- also, the "you" is intriguing, is the "you" the "someone" who the "girl" anticipates; who is this "you" and why is "you" carrying a watermelon?

    which leads me to stanza seven: not really liking it, is it the thick skin that's pushing it against "you"'s palms -- no, it's not, it's just the weight of the watermelon itself: try "its weight/ pushed against your arms,/ rounded like a skull/ ..."

    i put that ellipsis there b/c at least with that suggestion of the stanza (but also the original stanza itself) doesn't seem to end the poem

    i get that it's just a walk, that it's just observation, and i like that, []but give me something to really walk away (excuse the pun) with

    its weight
    pushed against your palms,
    rounded like a skull
    [is heavy][is meaningful][metaphor of some kind]
    []

    ^ forget all that, i read it again

    i really dig this poem, where it's going, and what it's about, i legitimately enjoyed it, thus i had to workshop it

    also, not every word at the beginning of a line NEEDS to be capitalized, although this is more often than not a stylistic choice, i suggest giving it a try (not capitalizing every beg. word) and see if you like it or not
     
  4. redyelruc

    redyelruc The Yard Man

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    I really enjoyed this but I would have to say that I didn't think 'dampened' and 'gauze' went well together.

    Good stuff though.
     
  5. skyfire

    skyfire Member

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    i have to agree that i like what this poem is about, but for me the poem really started with "you carried half a watermelon in your hands"...the last two stanzas is where i found the most evocative imagery. the way you worded it gives it kind of a sinister feel...you might want to try starting with the end of the poem and rewriting it, you mite be surprised by what you get...
     
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