Post your own work and critique others. Or just talk about poetry more generally and share poems you like.
First poem I've ever written, 2 days ago, how is this:Chickens running round the yard,Pecking near my feet,The sun meets the horizon,And voices sound from the street.
Roses are redLife is worthlessI want to dieSo very bad
>>24683228In the seven seas I will seekfor the deepest thought and the purest beliefuntil I've learned to fish for every dayand have stopped drowning in the storm that betrayed me(it kinda rhymes in ny language)
PerOty
>>24683228There's two poems that I always loved. Road ahead and behind from baseball player george moriarty. It really gives that topsport mentality. It really applies to anything that takes perseverance and where success isn't a certainty.>Sometimes I think the fates must>Grin as we denounce and insist>The only reason we can’t win>Is the fates themselves that miss>Yet there lives on the ancient claim>We win or lose within ourselves>The shining trophies on our shelves>Can never win tomorrow’s game>You and I know deeper down>There’s always a chance to win the crown>But when we fail to give our best>We simply haven’t met the test>Of giving all, and saving none>Until the game is really won>Of showing what is meant by grit>Of fighting on when others quit>Of playing through, not letting up>It’s bearing down that wins the cup>Of taking it and taking more>Until we gain the winning score>Of dreaming there’s a goal ahead>Of hoping when our dreams are dead>Of praying when our hopes have fled>Yet losing, not afraid to fall>If bravely, we have given all>For who can ask more of a man>Than giving all within his span>Giving all, it seems to me>Is not so far from victory>And so the Fates are seldom wrong>No matter how they twist and wind>It is you and I who make our fates>We open up or close the gates>On the road ahead or the road behindThough personally I think it should just be from "when we fail..." to "...far from victory".I also like Kipling's "the rabbi's song", pic related.Let me know what you guys think about them.
>>24683332This isn’t a place for you to shill your retarded Substack. Either post your poems directly in the thread or fuck off.
first part of a wip tribute to old school pastoral poetry. alexander pope, virgil's eclogues, things of that nature.>Now Dionoda, couched within the fold>Where thistles bloomed, and fleecy she-goats strolled,>Woke up; drunk gods the summer sunlight shed,>Deep she had slept upon her natural bed,>The empty wineskin in her one hand clasped,>The other o'er her aching eyes she cast.>Why feels she so amiss beneath this vale?>Its tufts of thistle and its she-goats pale,>The dawning sun which gods above provide,>Nor touched her heart, nor eased the dread inside.>For she had dreamt (and goatherds trust such signs),>As she stepped slowly through those unknown pines,>Across the path a mangled goat-corpse lay,>A bloody head it raised, and seemed to say:>'Goatherd, attend. The primal powers bid>That I inform you what the Fates had hid.>See my red fur; my downy throat cut through>Will seem like mercy when they're through with you.
The soft summer sun dripped throughthe trees, carried on a western breezethat wandered the forest like a sigh.I crossed rivers, wrestled bears,roamed until the light grew vague. The eventide sky darkened,the forest's edge unraveling wide.A cacophony shattered the quietgasoline fumes, engines roaring,headlights piercing the fringe of town. And there, I stood all alone.
A haiku.Night clear as vodka -- From the street a woman's voiceWarbles through the air.
mash potatoesapple saucebuttery...biscuitsand i get lost :DDDDbump
>>24684785Kill yourself.
>>24683228I do not know howto write poetryhow sad, I cry now
i'm literally addicted to writing 18thc. pastoral poetry. i like that you can name your shepherds basically whatever you want as long as it sounds sufficiently rustic or mediterranean. it feels like naming sims:When Applepip, fresh from the hunt, came downThe sleek green slope which waving poplars crown,And on the dewy grass had dropped the deer,He saw Mirtazapine approaching near;A long forgotten friend! MirtazapineSpoke softly thus, while he remained unseen:'Nine summers now, innumerable nightsAlone I've spurned our pastoral delights,Forsook our groves where shepherdesses dance,And swains their honour and their virtue chance.So have I hidden on this mountain sideSince cruèl Iphigenia my love denied.'
>>24684868one cool technique from this era of poetry was to occasionally switch to a line of six stresses instead of five. they didn't do it regularly, the point was to deploy it as a neat surprising effect at the right moment.
>>24684868>Mirtazapine>18th C pastoralWat
>>24684971welcome to the postmodern era my brother
>>24684978Oh sorry*(H)wat
Interesting. People will post poetry, but have little comment on it.I often have the impression that even people that enjoy poetry, care little for poetry in general. Why is that?
>>24685548A lot of the thread is for critique, and for critique, very few poems fall into the "needs work and needs a reply" category. Most fall into the "unsalvageable" and "stet" categoriesSometimes anons write discursive essays on particular forms, but most of the thread is generally OC poetry crit
>>24683298How's it run in your language?
>>24684315"Clear as vodka" is an interesting image, though I'm not sure how to interpret it. I'm guessing it means stinging cold, like the stinging, burning feeling of vodka as it goes down your throat, but that's just my guess (also since there would be no kigo otherwise)
FuckMyFamily
>>24683228battymon fi deadkill all single momsallahu akbar
>>24683228Peroty?
>>24683228A specter invades a nightly retreat,to a land of lost wants and thoughts incomplete.Upon baren soil i stand, bewildered at the sightof a pale apparition shining bright, and bold she stoodTowering againts the ocean dark sky.Her eyes beamed upon my soulInquiring on days of oldof when her hands i held, herlips i felt, and soul i exploredHer voice trickled down to my earsQuestioning decisions made over the yearsThe siren's song closed with a gongasking if i'm happy to be where i belongTo her i say "tis' futile to liefor you've seen the truth, in the depths of my eyewhy ponder upon a question, if the answer is known?tis' not fair to torment a soul, foul as it is,with questions such as those. But here i present,For your ears to hear, the sorrow of lossof a lover held dear."On her ears befell my woes and fearsan empty vessel drowning in tearsmy words came to a stop, and from her a faint smilethen she whispered, "sweet child,remember not what we had, nor what we could have been.Seek instead for a fire within, for i see your ember fading,your mind waning, and your soul wandering.I pray the Sun grant you Strength to bareA world lost to ambition and despair."Her Revelations Ceased, The Specter fades into the evanescent blue.No more real than memory, yet eternally true.A Fire grew to the west, on the lush green grass of the Prairie,A glimmer darted into the Moon's domain,in rebellion against the night's tyranny.
>>24686396In de zeven zeeen zal ik zoekennaar de diepste waarheiden het zuiverste gelooftot ik elke dag heb leren vissenen niet meer verdrinkin de storm die mij bedroogI typed it into a Nokia phone while on a bike when I was 15. I think it's the only thing I've written that felt worth preserving. I sent it to my mother. She is pisces (vissen). She also is the storm. She liked it. I don't think she got it. Though I don't think I did back then, either.
>>24684315>>24686403I interpreted it as the night being warbled too by drunks, so both clear and not clear, in the way wodka makes people blurry, even if itself it is clear.>>24685703Isn't it sometimes worth pointing out which of the two it is and why? It's the clash of perspectives that makes communication interesting, isn't it?
I wandered alone through the crumbling stone.A shadow that roams.My people are gone, yet my spirit lives on.All that remains is empty, a stain.In the streets, in the towns all the people are brown.An Empire in rubble, no fighting, no struggle.All that's left of Old England; a puddle.
SleeperShimmer and awake my love,the surf too cold for waking.Manic from the high dream,the dreaming too bold to touch.You the arbiter, lovely and ever-fairhave seen my swelling fruits.The seeming to hold so tenderand the cold lies bitter on the ground.And the cold lies bitter on the ground.
>>24688397I don't get the "my spirit lives on". I don't know why, but that bit seems out of sync with the rest of it. Lovely last 2 lines though.>>24688557>You the arbiter, lovely and ever-fairhave seen my swelling fruits.She saw your balls?
>>24684001This is very good; your imagery is vibrant. You say its a work in progress. Is there anywhere or any way I can read your other work? This excerpt is one of my favorite snippets of poetry I've seen on /lit/ in years.
>>24688133>Isn't it sometimes worth pointing out which of the two it is and whyYes, but not as often as your hopes may rest on