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In this my waiting
Ah, in this my waiting,
how fast October goes,
how swiftly day fades into dark.
My melancholic rose,
like one who sailed an ancient river
where the green papyrus grows -
like her, like you: no age can wither,
nor custom stale. Your nose
may be substantially shorter,
but there’s poetry in your prose.
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(10-27-2025, 06:12 PM)busker Wrote: In this my waiting
Ah, in this my waiting,
how fast October goes,
how swiftly day fades into dark.
My melancholic rose, holy shit why does this flow so beautifully? is it a result of meter?
like one who sailed an ancient river
where the green papyrus grows - kind of wish there was another rhyme scheme here, instead of this abc/bdb thing so far
like her, like you: no age can wither,
nor custom stale. Your nose curious about the chop here, seems deliberately technical, but a bit meaningless
may be substantially shorter,
but there’s poetry in your prose. I hope this message reaches its intended audience
Love this one Busker, wish there was a bit more adherence to the meter so beautifully prescribed in l2/l5, but the poem has a undeniable flow and a powerful message. We need a wizard to critique this, I think theres something great here.
Crit away
Posts: 1,186
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(10-27-2025, 06:12 PM)busker Wrote: In this my waiting
Ah, in this my waiting, another comma after "this?" Probably not.
how fast October goes,
how swiftly day fades into dark. nice stanza.
My melancholic rose,
like one who sailed an ancient river
where the green papyrus grows - could replace "the" with further one-syllable description but, really, stet. Reads well.
like her, like you: no age can wither,
nor custom stale. Your nose sophisticated reference back to Shakespear's Cleopatra, stopping short of "variety"
may be substantially shorter, humor noted, kind of a Thurber multisyllable with "substantially"
but there’s poetry in your prose. and then return to serious compliment.
In moderate critique, the stage-setting first stanza is pleasant but doesn't set it for what follows. Speaker is sad, but this is only implied.
In S2, who's melancholic? From S1, the speaker but, proximately, the beloved. Not sure about that ambiguity, but it's not a serious problem.
In S3, I envy the speaker his well-read beloved who will catch the dramatic reference. And will take the compliment to her nose - as being less outstanding than Cleopatra's - in the spirit intended despite definite levity. Which is to say, she's a good sport.
I have no real advice on improvement, other than (maybe) to make clear that the speaker rather than the beloved is suffering melancholy. Making the nose size comparison less funny does not appeal: it's a short poem, it has turns, and it ends up where intended. Good job. And may *your* Cleo be no less appreciative.
Non-practicing atheist