Merlin wrote:Yeah - I enjoyed this...
Is there meant to be a comma ,after; beauty ?
The flow is sweet - I am unable to see the the connection to both parts though...
But that's probably just me
Nice job
Thank you, Merlin for that very nice reply!
Well, I had a comma to start with, but then decided that I didn't want
that much of a pause between lines, because I wanted the
following line read quickly, to leave a dramatic pause before
"whereas."
That may well have been a bad choice. I'm not a good enough
writer to figure that out.
The piece has an extended metaphor running through it.
The first verse speaks to the difference between a man who marries
for the sake of having a trophy that other men will envy, and the
couple who marry for love and companionship, in order to live
an entire life together, and build something for the ages, especially
if they have children.
The metaphor is intended to extend to the second verse, which
says that a poet is not merely an artisan, a skilled manual laborer,
but is creating a body of work which means more than the separate
pieces he or she builds. This is the difference between an artisan
and an artist.
The poet and his works (which include the readers of them)
are like the truly married couple: the relationship between the
creator of poetry and the reader, through the medium of the
written or spoken word, is like the greater sum of the true
marriage, and both require total dedication to be masterfully
successful. Hence the title.
Thanks again!