First and Last Days (A Little Prayer, revised, new title)
#1
I’m a old man adrift on a sea 
of night sweats, dreams
where dodging faces 
surface in the waves,
my body a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to finally sink 
and let the deep devour it.

A tangle of wet sheets
wait for me on waking.
I groan and creak, 
a  worm-eaten galleon rising 
from the bottom of sleep
salt water dribbling down my chest.

Drowning in dread
of another day in decline
I hail the young
who guard these coasts
sea-borne saints
who glance in my direction
and turn away, indifferent
to my senescent struggles.




First and Last Days



My eyes signal 

that I’m still here

to angels who glance 

and turn away

sometimes with pity,

sometimes with surprise.









First and Last Days







My childhood is back,



its vengeance is divine,



buzzing in my ears like flies.



But this time round I’m an orphan,



set adrift by too much time 



on an ocean of night sweats 



and dreams of misunderstood faces,



my body a waterlogged raft



too stubborn to sink 



and let the nightmares devour it. 







My eyes frantically signal 



the young that I’m still a child



angels who glance 



at my mortality and turn away



sometimes with pity,



sometimes with surprise.























A Little Prayer







“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)















I’m a broken old man







adrift on a sea of night sweats







and misunderstood faces,







my body a waterlogged raft







too stubborn to sink decently 







and let the deep devour me at last.















If it’s all the same to you,







my life was an absurd one.







Who knew absurdity







could become so fragile?







Now it creaks, exudes foul gases,







disgusts the young







who see the pale rider 







behind my eyes







and turn away, angels







who glance towards the damned,







sometimes with pity,







sometimes with surprise.















I know there’s a joke







at the end of this empty math.







I just hope I can laugh







when the punchline comes.







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#2
(06-14-2023, 07:45 AM)TranquillityBase Wrote:  A Little Prayer
“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)

I’m a broken old man
adrift on a sea of night sweats …. Maybe enjamb with a break at ‘sea’ 
and misunderstood faces,
my body a waterlogged raft …. Great image 
too stubborn to sink decently 
and let the deep devour me at last. …. I, my…don’t need the ‘me’. Also, feels stretched. Maybe ‘devour it’, which concludes the raft metaphor?

If it’s all the same to you,
my life was an absurd one.
Who knew absurdity
could become so fragile?
Now it creaks, exudes foul gases, …. ‘Gas’ rather than ‘foul gases’ should do it
disgusts the young
who see the pale rider 
behind my eyes … a nice swerve from the corporeal to the not so much 
and turn away, angels
who glance towards the damned,
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.  …nicely done 

I know there’s a joke
at the end of this empty math.
I just hope I can laugh
when the punchline comes. …. The last 2 lines are weaker than the rest of the poem. Can’t suggest anything at the moment, but 

Nice one.  Can be made better
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#3
(06-14-2023, 07:45 AM)TranquillityBase Wrote:  A Little Prayer
“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)

I am
a broken old man, adrift
on a sea of night sweats
and misunderstood faces,  not sure where this comes from
my body a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to sink decently implied for me
and let the deep devour me at last.

If it’s all the same to you,
my life was an absurd one.     Is there anything you can add here to flesh this out?
Who knew
absurdity could become so fragile?          
Now it creaks, exudes foul gases,
disgusts the young
who see the pale rider 
behind my eyes
and turn away, angels          really nice enjambment 
glancing towards the damned
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.      my favorite lines

I know there’s a joke
at the end of this empty math.
I just hope I can laugh.
when the punchline comes.
Hi TqB,
really enjoyed this.  obviously I've made suggestions above.  I feel I should explain the change to the first line.  One, it's a strong opening and has a little resonance with 'man', but more importantly it reflects the tone of the poem.  While there is a lot of self deprecation, there is an under current of the narrator having a strong sense of self and resilience and reflects that in a subtle way. Hope you find some useful.
Bryn
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#4
For some reason, I was reminded of Ray's poems on this site. He used to have little pictures and illustrations.
The above would be a nice little picture poem, with a raft theme. Maybe if the poem were shaped like a raft?

It's good, all TqB's poems are good, but maybe a slightly different representation?

Just a suggestion
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#5
.
Hi Tim,
a puzzling but enjoyable read..


A Little Prayer ................................... It doesn't read like a prayer (even if the ending is a plea.)


I’m a broken old man ........................ don't think you need this line (you have s2 after all.)
adrift on a sea of night sweats
and misunderstood faces,
my body a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to sink decently
and let the deep devour me at last. .... Does this poem need this verse?

If it’s all the same to you, .................. Struggle moving from this line to the next one (but, regardless, this makes for a much better opening line.)
my life was an absurd one.
Who knew absurdity
could become so fragile?
Now it creaks, exudes foul gases, ..... maybe 'noxious' for foul? Better sonics, perhaps?
disgusts the young
who see the pale rider ...................... I think the 'pale rider' (and the rest of this section) is the poem taking a detour. Stick with the bodily decay and leave the rest alone. 'Damned' seems far too histrionic (and nowhere near as interesting as the 'waterlogged raft' image.)
behind my eyes
and turn away, angels
who glance towards the damned,
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.

I know there’s a joke
at the end of this empty math. ......... don't understand the use of 'math' here.
I just hope I can laugh
when the punchline comes.



Best, Knot


.
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#6
(06-14-2023, 04:52 PM)busker Wrote:  For some reason, I was reminded of Ray's poems on this site.  He used to have little pictures and illustrations.

I'd dearly love to know how to insert pictures into a post.  I've never been able to do so, and I've tried repeatedly, both using the "insert an image" from the toolbar, and creative attempts at copy and paste.  Nothing works.  Perhaps it's because I use a Mac.  I'm baffled.

Busker, Bryn, and Knot,

Thanks for the feedback.  A lot of good ideas.  I know this one needs a lot of editing.  I put everything I had into it, but that was yesterday.  Today's a new day!
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#7
I always chop out the before and after Message Quotations and get to business.



A Little Prayer
“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)

I’m a broken old man
adrift on a sea of night sweats
and misunderstood faces,



Are you or the speak(er) these things? broken, adrift, misunderstood. These adjectives are what's in the way. No need for a question mark on my behalf, whatever that means. 

You are possibly a poem of other things. Other descriptive terms; or none.



my body a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to sink decently 
and let the deep devour me at last.



The length of this stanza feels like Psychology. 


If it’s all the same to you,
my life was an absurd one.
Who knew absurdity

There is play you could play with this Who word. 


could become so fragile?
Now it creaks, exudes foul gases,
disgusts the young
who see the pale rider 
behind my eyes

Do they see the pale rider? Disgust is a strong word for so little discouragement. Gases and creaks make the nights go boomboom.




and turn away, angels

Angels who turn away are angles

Notice how I used no punctuation there.

who glance towards the damned,

You mean towards the end of life.

sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.

I know there’s a joke
at the end of this empty math.
I just hope I can laugh

Why you laugh at your own thing? In this context here?

when the punchline comes.
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#8
(06-15-2023, 06:30 AM)rowens Wrote:  I always chop out the before and after Message Quotations and get to business.



A Little Prayer
“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)

I’m a broken old man
adrift on a sea of night sweats
and misunderstood faces,



Are you or the speak(er) these things? broken, adrift, misunderstood. These adjectives are what's in the way. No need for a question mark on my behalf, whatever that means. 

You are possibly a poem of other things. Other descriptive terms; or none.



my body a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to sink decently 
and let the deep devour me at last.



The length of this stanza feels like Psychology. 


If it’s all the same to you,
my life was an absurd one.
Who knew absurdity

There is play you could play with this Who word. 


could become so fragile?
Now it creaks, exudes foul gases,
disgusts the young
who see the pale rider 
behind my eyes

Do they see the pale rider? Disgust is a strong word for so little discouragement. Gases and creaks make the nights go boomboom.




and turn away, angels

Angels who turn away are angles

Notice how I used no punctuation there.

who glance towards the damned,

You mean towards the end of life.

sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.

I know there’s a joke
at the end of this empty math.
I just hope I can laugh

Why you laugh at your own thing? In this context here?

when the punchline comes.

Thanks Rowens,

I'd pretty much rewritten it in toto by the time I got to your comments.

TqB
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#9
A new poem, i thought
Then I realised it was the old one.

The rewritten version isn’t working. For instance, the first three lines - too short, too regular, jarring.
There’s a lot of telling in this one.

The original was beautiful. A few tweaks, maybe, if at all.
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#10
(06-14-2023, 07:45 AM)TranquillityBase Wrote:  First and Last Days

My eyes signal 
that I’m still here
to angels who glance 
and turn away
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise.




First and Last Days



My childhood is back,

its vengeance is divine,

buzzing in my ears like flies.

But this time round I’m an orphan,

set adrift by too much time 

on an ocean of night sweats 

and dreams of misunderstood faces,

my body a waterlogged raft

too stubborn to sink 

and let the nightmares devour it. 



My eyes frantically signal 

the young that I’m still a child

angels who glance 

at my mortality and turn away

sometimes with pity,

sometimes with surprise.











A Little Prayer



“I’ll wait for Jesus, if he’ll wait for me” (graffiti)







I’m a broken old man



adrift on a sea of night sweats



and misunderstood faces,



my body a waterlogged raft



too stubborn to sink decently 



and let the deep devour me at last.







If it’s all the same to you,



my life was an absurd one.



Who knew absurdity



could become so fragile?



Now it creaks, exudes foul gases,



disgusts the young



who see the pale rider 



behind my eyes



and turn away, angels



who glance towards the damned,



sometimes with pity,



sometimes with surprise.







I know there’s a joke



at the end of this empty math.



I just hope I can laugh



when the punchline comes.



Hi TqB,
This does seem to be the essence of the narrator's vision.  But i wonder how my interpretation is influenced by previous versions.  I think the value of the differences between the versions is better measured in style and I don't mean superficially but more lyrical vs narrative.  That, I think, is something for you to decide.
bryn
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#11
For what it’s worth, the original was the real deal
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#12
(06-19-2023, 10:54 AM)brynmawr1 Wrote:  Hi TqB,
This does seem to be the essence of the narrator's vision.  But i wonder how my interpretation is influenced by previous versions.  I think the value of the differences between the versions is better measured in style and I don't mean superficially but more lyrical vs narrative.  That, I think, is something for you to decide.
bryn

Bryn,
Thanks for the read and comments.  This one is giving me trouble.  
TqB

(06-19-2023, 10:23 PM)busker Wrote:  For what it’s worth, the original was the real deal

Thanks Busker,

I've retrieved the original and am going to give it another going over.  The first part of the poem just seemed too laborious in the days after I initially wrote it.  Re-reading it now, I see possibilities in it.  I kept cutting because the lines about the angels' glance were the only ones that pleased me any longer.

TqB
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#13
.
Hi TqB,
while you're revisiting, just a thought


to angels who glance
and turn away
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise
my eyes signal
that I’m still here.
.
.
(If  not a poem in itself, then certainly the end of one? Smile )
.
Best, Knot
.
Reply
#14
(06-21-2023, 09:53 PM)Knot Wrote:  .
Hi TqB,
while you're revisiting, just a thought


to angels who glance
and turn away
sometimes with pity,
sometimes with surprise
my eyes signal
that I’m still here.
.
.
(If  not a poem in itself, then certainly the end of one? Smile )
.
Best, Knot
.

Knot,

Thanks for revisiting.  It would make a fine ending had I not galloped off in another direction.  Anyway, I've tweaked the original to follow my first inspiration, which was the night sweats, a miserable visitation brought on, I'm told, by a medication.

I think this version, overwritten as it is, says what I set out to describe in the first place.

TqB
Reply
#15
.
Hi Tim,
"overwritten" - yep, I think so (but it's really just the ending.)
I did miss not having a third 'wreck' in the final verse, but maybe ...

adrift on a sea of night
sweats, this old man's body
a waterlogged raft
too stubborn to sink

A tangle of wet sheets
wait for me on waking.
I groan and creak,
a  worm-eaten galleon

rising from the bottom
of sleep. Drowning in dread

or

A tangle of wet sheets
wait for me on waking.
An old man's body
a waterlogged raft

too stubborn to sink
adrift on a sea of night
sweats, I groan and creak,
a  worm-eaten galleon

rising from the bottom
of sleep. Drowning in dread


Best, Knot

.
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