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The Pen is Mightier than the Sword

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Posted (edited)

He swims with wide, swift strokes

Forcing the water to follow

His face laps against its friction

Viscous malcontent rapping against his lungs

 

 

The pungent taste of chlorine bites at his nose

The fetid smell of decomposition gnaws at his mouth

 

Invariably

Trying to stay abreast of the slough's ebb

And swimming with wide, swift strokes against its flow

Edited by Loki Wyrd
Posted

An Amorphous Pause

Sacramental stumps of ashen cigarette butts

Deposited on the toilet seat.

Lilliputians embark in consuming themselves

As penance for their sins, while scrutinized

Continuously by their chosen immortal things.

Posted

I think that both of these are fantastic poems, Loki Wyrd. :)

 

I found the imagery in "Capacity of 1" very vivid and evocative, particularly in the depiction of the chlorine biting at the man's nose and the image of the man swimming against the friction of the waves. The repetition of his "wide, swift strokes" and the inclusion of the opposing flow suggested to me a strong metaphorical depiction of struggle. Your word choice and phrasing were also excellent ("slough's ebb," for example), though the fourth and sixth lines struck me as a bit more wordy with their adjectives than the rest of the poem. An excellent piece of poetry, overall.

 

"An Amorphous Pause" was similarly breathtaking in its phrasing and imagery, especially in the description and clever arrangement of the lines "ashen cigarette butts/ Deposited on the toilet seat." The poem came across as more directly philosophical than "Capacity of 1" yet was no less fascinating to me, as the impossible struggle to achieve penance was referenced in a very strong manner. Another great piece.

 

Of minor note and out of pure curiousity: is there a reason for the first initial of every line to be capitalized in these poems?

 

Wyvern humbles himself in front of Loki Wyrd's poetry expertise. :-)

Posted

I don't believe in autoformat, nor will I stand for it. Capitalizing the initial letters was really but an arbitrary decision, no hidden meaning--this time. :)

 

I tend to agree with you about lines 4 and 6. I probably could just drop fetid and viscous and say just as much; it's just some words hold a certain glammer for me. If I changed 'fetid smell' to 'scent', do you think that would be an improvement?

Posted (edited)

Revision:

 

Capacity of 1

 

He swims with wide, swift strokes

Forcing the water to follow

His face laps against its friction

Malcontent rapping against his lungs

 

 

The pungent taste of chlorine bites at his nose

The fetid miasma lingers in his mouth

 

Invariably

Trying to stay abreast of the slough's ebb

And swimming with wide, swift strokes against its flow

Edited by Loki Wyrd
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