(1st revision)
old suffolk barn
rustic, ragged
and weather-beaten
with stressed out beamed interiors
and cloudy red rooftops
silk thread nets
in dark corners
with hungry spiders and twitchy legs
feeling for their lunch
mice scout in hidden holes
for fragments of food
darting in and out
of crumbled brick
some balanced on dried out sticks
brought in by the farmer’s dog
tucked away
above
in a quiet spot on a jointed beam
a mud house
of twittering swallows
and parents swooping in
with beaks full of flies
chicks squabbling
screeching
gobbling
growing
ready to fly
the barn
now quiet
but not quite empty
the spiders and mice
are still busy
(Original post)
This is my first posting of a poem on this board so let's see what you think, good or bad. It's in free verse (obviously) and I seldom use punctuation; instead, I use line breaks to indicate where commas could be and line spaces for full stops.
old Suffolk barns
rustic and ragged
cloudy red rooftops
weather-beaten ginger forts
with stressed out beamed interiors
silk thread net curtains
in dark corners
with hungry spiders and twitchy legs
feeling for their lunch
mice twitch and scout
in hidden holes
for fragments of food
darting in and out
of crumbled brick
some balanced on dried out sticks
brought in by the farmer’s dog
tucked away
above
in a quite spot on a jointed beam
a mud house of twittering swallows
and parents swooping in
with beak-fulls of flies
babies squabbling
screeching
gobbling
growing
ready to fly
the barn
now empty and quiet
Suffolk Barn
Hello Ron, welcome to the forum.
A very pleasant descriptive piece which, I think, contains a metaphor of a house and the owners growing old and children leaving home?
Personally, if I write a piece without capitalisation or punctuation I like to go the whole hog and omit all of it, unless there's a valid reason. I see that you've kept a capital S for Suffolk and you've added apostrophes. A personal choice of course, but I like to go for all or nothing myself.
There's a spelling mistake half way through, should quite = quiet?
I think this bit:
with beaks full of flies
chicks squabbling
screeching
I think beaks full looks better on the page and sounds better rhythmically. And chicks instead of babies sounds a little less trite and adds a nice bit of consonance.
Look forward to reading more from you.
Regards,
Nash.
A very pleasant descriptive piece which, I think, contains a metaphor of a house and the owners growing old and children leaving home?
Personally, if I write a piece without capitalisation or punctuation I like to go the whole hog and omit all of it, unless there's a valid reason. I see that you've kept a capital S for Suffolk and you've added apostrophes. A personal choice of course, but I like to go for all or nothing myself.
There's a spelling mistake half way through, should quite = quiet?
I think this bit:
Would read better asRon63 wrote:with beak-fulls of flies
babies squabbling
screeching
with beaks full of flies
chicks squabbling
screeching
I think beaks full looks better on the page and sounds better rhythmically. And chicks instead of babies sounds a little less trite and adds a nice bit of consonance.
Look forward to reading more from you.
Regards,
Nash.
I enoyed the picture you created. Look forward to more.Ron63 wrote:
old Suffolk barns....... A plural, but a singular 'barn' to conclude/title. For me the particular rather than general is effective.
rustic and ragged
cloudy red rooftops....................perhaps shift to L5, so all that 'r' alliteration is not clustered
weather-beaten ginger forts....................'ginger' made me think of hair?
with stressed out beamed interiors
silk thread net curtains
in dark corners
with hungry spiders and twitchy legs............I like 'twitchy'...set the tension
feeling for their lunch
mice twitch and scout............I think the repetition of 'twitch' devalues its earlier use
in hidden holes
for fragments of food
darting in and out
of crumbled brick
some balanced on dried out sticks
brought in by the farmer’s dog
tucked away
above
in a quite spot on a jointed beam
a mud house of twittering swallows.........spider/mice/birds has a logical sequential feel
and parents swooping in
with beak-fulls of flies...........................Nash's suggestion is smoother
babies squabbling
screeching
gobbling
growing
ready to fly.............................I like the way this tails off
the barn
now empty and quiet........................wouldn't it still be full of spiders?
Please ignore any suggestions if unhelpful
cheers
Mac
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Yes, a pleasant-enough first post, with some nice touches. I enjoyed the drama of:
babies squabbling
screeching
gobbling
growing
ready to fly
though I agree with nash about babies. I also think there are some weaker aspects, some of which have already been pointed out. For me, the piece's main flaw is its motivation of description only. Nash has hypothesised that it has an allegorical nature, and I'd like to believe he's right. But I don't, I'm afraid.
But I may be wrong.
Anyway, yes, let's see more.
Cheers
peter
babies squabbling
screeching
gobbling
growing
ready to fly
though I agree with nash about babies. I also think there are some weaker aspects, some of which have already been pointed out. For me, the piece's main flaw is its motivation of description only. Nash has hypothesised that it has an allegorical nature, and I'd like to believe he's right. But I don't, I'm afraid.
But I may be wrong.
Anyway, yes, let's see more.
Cheers
peter
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- Location: Land of the Midnight Sun
Hi Ron,
A nice first post and it shows that you have an eye observation. I like the gentleness in this description of nature.
You've gotten some good crits and your revision is better than the original. I look forward to more from you, I like the mood.
Suzanne
A nice first post and it shows that you have an eye observation. I like the gentleness in this description of nature.
You've gotten some good crits and your revision is better than the original. I look forward to more from you, I like the mood.
Suzanne