04-09-2014, 04:15 AM
(04-09-2014, 12:28 AM)71degrees Wrote: An old man, his stiff collar; Over perfunctory and concatenated. An old man and his collar what? He moves, you say, from room to room, but imply his collar does not. The phrasing is a little "stage direction" and it does not do what it sets out to do. I assume you ARE setting the scene?Just a tweak would do it and you canHi 71,
he moves from room to room,
placing his hands on worn spots
about the apartment: arm chair, Nested colons and semicolons are grammatically difficult to reconcile. With very few exceptions ( modern novelists get away with murder) a period is needed somewhere. An old man in a stiff collar, moves from room to room. He places hands on worn spots; arm chair, night shirt, orange doily, edges of a picture in black and white. His father. Your poem
orange doily, night shirt, edges
of a black-and-white
photo of his father
His father read meters
for the electric company comma
door-to-door, an honest wife Period after door
rubbed his feet at night,
soles worn by the miles Period
spring, summer, autumn, winterCapital Spring. It is in another stanza, after all
rain, children, geese, steam trains
street cars, family picnics, weddings Mind the gap. Why do this? It is a grouped list. So group it.
family portraits, funeral snowPeriod. What is funeral snow? Is it like black confetti?
All these both have lived, AAARrGggH ! All these both???Have you proof read this? "Through all these cameos, both have lived.."
in all the rooms, the worn places, All, all. Get rid of the first all. "in every room, the worn places"...shit, there goes the second one. All gone.
the moons and soon everything Gobbledygook to the finish. The rush for the tape. The end needs work. In spite of what you may have heard, the last impression often lasts longest.
people remember so fondly
I know what you are trying to do and I like it but you can polish this on your own. It is almost there but you rushed it and missed some bits.
Best,
tectak

