(03-18-2015, 04:37 PM)summermoose Wrote: Start with the words from heart of the wise
Sacrifice meaning with excuse-fused lies
Bend with the lows and cheer with the highs
Wash out wash in, sure to move with the tides
Circumstance of the moon dictates my mind
Feeling up this time, but tick tick time flies
Hi summer,
You have a good ear and a good idea. The tick-tocking of the metaphysical metaphor carries the piece along nicely...beating heart, lows and highs, wash out/in, tides, lunar cycles. So what could possibly go wrong? Not a lot...but if you are asking for crit then punctation would help. This is a simple piece with its own rhythm but as you bizarrely capitalise every line start like some 1950's indoctrinated student of 19th century poetry you create confusion where none should be...to the detriment of the already compromised meter.
Even paced poetry will quite often have meter dictated by simple syllable count. L1 has 9, L2 has 10. So put "the" before "heart" in L1. 10/10.
L3 counts 9 again, but L4 has 10. About now one may think that you were going for a pattern here. So look at the last two lines. Are they 10/9. Nope.10/10.
So spot the odd one out. L3 is a half foot short. There is a cool answer. How about "Bend with the lows and cheer up with the highs"? Cheer up, get it?
Your poem, but I would suggest for L1, all other things taken in to consideration, that you get rid of the first "the" so:
"Start with sweet words from the hearts of the wise.."
Sweet-hearts, get it?
Ending on a general observation, use of "the" definite article can often be avoided and so it ought. It fills a space where a
defining word should be, as above.
"Bend with deep lows and cheer up with sky highs." OK. This is cheap. You can do better, of that I am certain.
Best,
tectak