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Thread: Poetry Contest

  1. #481
    in angulo cum libro Petrarch's Love's Avatar
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    Yes, I think we'd all like to see a winner for this round so we can get to writing some more poems. Don't worry about responding to everyone, Tal. Just relieve us all from the suspense.

    "In rime sparse il suono/ di quei sospiri ond' io nudriva 'l core/ in sul mio primo giovenile errore"~ Francesco Petrarca
    "Follies and nonsense, whims and inconsistencies do divert me, I own, and I laugh at them whenever I can."~ Jane Austen

  2. #482
    Our wee Olympic swimmer Janine's Avatar
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    I think there should be a time span or limit - maybe a month for each poetry contest. Two months is too long...some people may lose interest in the thread and depart forever.
    "It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

    Chapter 7, The Little Prince ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

  3. #483
    Springing Riesa's Avatar
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    It hasn't been two months, not even a month yet. He posted his picture on the 22knd. and Virg, if I'm not mistaken YOU are repeatedly asking for more time to write them, what's the big deal if he takes a few days to judge them?
    "Don't matter who they are, anybody sets foot in this house, they are company and don't let me catch you remarking on their ways like you were so high and mighty."

  4. #484
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    Quote Originally Posted by Riesa View Post
    It hasn't been two months, not even a month yet. He posted his picture on the 22knd. and Virg, if I'm not mistaken YOU are repeatedly asking for more time to write them, what's the big deal if he takes a few days to judge them?
    I think he meant it felt like two months But I must say I lean towards agreeing with you. We Lit-Net members are just going bananas for this poetry contest deal!

  5. #485
    Thinking...thinking! dramasnot6's Avatar
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    Let's just wait for Tal for as long as it takes before we brainstorm big changes like this. Everyone goes through busy times.
    I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading! How much sooner one tires of anything than of a book! When I have a house of my own, I shall be miserable if I have not an excellent library.


    Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

  6. #486
    Not politically correct Pendragon's Avatar
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    Smile

    Well, as I said, the picture left so many interpretations. Give Tal a break, it must be hard to chose. I agree there should be a time limit. However, if we say poems must be in by a certain date, then there should be no extension of writing time if one is not willing to wait on judging time. It would only be fair. Then the one judging would have "x" amount of time to review and judge. The day for the posting of the winner would be known to all from the start. Sound reasonable?
    Some of us laugh
    Some of us cry
    Some of us smoke
    Some of us lie
    But it's all just the way
    that we cope with our lives...

  7. #487
    Our wee Olympic swimmer Janine's Avatar
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    Sorry, I was thinking also from what others said it was two months. If it was just over one - understandable with the holidays and all and eveyone tired and sluggish afterwards. I agree with Pen, maybe some kind of loose structure would be good....some time limit and some guide lines.
    "It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

    Chapter 7, The Little Prince ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

  8. #488
    Thinking...thinking! dramasnot6's Avatar
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    Sounds good! Of course, like the contestants, I think under reasonable circumstances the judge should be able to request an extension for maybe a few days? But we can limit extensions too?
    I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading! How much sooner one tires of anything than of a book! When I have a house of my own, I shall be miserable if I have not an excellent library.


    Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

  9. #489
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Riesa View Post
    It hasn't been two months, not even a month yet. He posted his picture on the 22knd. and Virg, if I'm not mistaken YOU are repeatedly asking for more time to write them, what's the big deal if he takes a few days to judge them?
    Oh you are quite right. I just cheked and Tal posted his picture on December 22nd. My humblest apologies Tal. For some reason it does feel like a long time ago.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  10. #490
    Springing Riesa's Avatar
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    btw...where is tal?
    "Don't matter who they are, anybody sets foot in this house, they are company and don't let me catch you remarking on their ways like you were so high and mighty."

  11. #491
    Not politically correct Pendragon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dramasnot6 View Post
    Sounds good! Of course, like the contestants, I think under reasonable circumstances the judge should be able to request an extension for maybe a few days? But we can limit extensions too?
    It would certainly have to be guidelines everyone is involved in drafting, or someone is going to get their feelings hurt. So we should perhaps all be thinking about this, how much time limit is reasonable for writing of poems, how much extention is reasonable, how much time limit is reasonable for judging (always taking into mind the number of poems submitted!) and how much extention is reasonable before making a decision. But it must be a team effort, not crafted by any one of us. Virgil makes a good chairman, if no one (besides himself!), objects, we could pass the info on to him, or run a poll. What say you?
    Some of us laugh
    Some of us cry
    Some of us smoke
    Some of us lie
    But it's all just the way
    that we cope with our lives...

  12. #492
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Let me say that when I've been a judge, it has taken me about two hours to read the poems and come to a decision. It's usually just a question of finding two straight hours available. And then perhaps a third hour to write up something which offers comments. I don't really understand what takes so long.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  13. #493
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    I think that this round is just the rare exception. Every contest before this one I felt was done in a timely manner.

  14. #494
    Serious business Taliesin's Avatar
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    We are sorry for being so late judging the poems. But anyway, here goes.


    Quote Originally Posted by Triskele
    Moon

    Dark suns of fiery grace
    Parade the sunshine of lost souls
    Who dares the shrapnel of the heart?
    What thought drives men to love
    Darkened spires of desire, tipped with poison
    The jagged shaft of deaths arrow
    Speeding onward, driving we to act
    In desperation before days moon ends
    Lack of light skies in our minds
    As thoughts travel onward… past… present
    Life’s love of action drives men to fly
    Pushes women to deaths edge
    So all can say they have gone
    A good, eerie poem.

    We especially liked these stanzas:

    Who dares the shrapnel of the heart?
    What thought drives men to love
    Darkened spires of desire, tipped with poison
    As thoughts travel onward… past… present
    Life’s love of action drives men to fly
    Pushes women to deaths edge
    So all can say they have gone
    ***
    Quote Originally Posted by mir

    Speared sky

    In paths of darkness
    Walk the worker
    Only ever
    Looking down;
    Though the sun
    Fell ever slowly
    To its end,
    He looked not round.
    What meaning
    Are worlds given
    When each tenant
    Never sees them
    Trapped inside
    Their own dimension
    With wireless
    To disease them?
    If the sun,
    The moon, the stars,
    Should quietly
    Implode
    Wishing only
    To be noticed
    For their work -
    A heavy load! -
    No cell phone
    Would ring a query,
    No email
    Comment
    On how dark
    It seems these days
    Or where the
    Rainbows went.
    For no one
    Looks anymore
    Or has a care.
    These mumbles -
    As skies fall down
    Upon our heads,
    We watch our feet
    For stumbles.
    We like the short, rhyming stanzas. The rhythm of the poem feels punctured, almost broken. And these lines were fantastic:

    What meaning
    Are worlds given
    When each tenant
    Never sees them
    Trapped inside
    Their own dimension
    With wireless
    To disease them?
    If the sun,
    The moon, the stars,
    Should quietly
    Implode
    Wishing only
    To be noticed
    For their work -
    A heavy load! -
    No cell phone
    Would ring a query,
    No email

    ***

    Quote Originally Posted by Pensive

    A Toy


    The immensely dark clouds are over him
    Night has fallen on everything;
    To him everything looks very dim

    He can't guess what's happening around
    Whoever is playing with him, he can't merely think
    From a human being, he is made a machine
    Who can't sing, who in front of his controllers, can't even blink

    Holding his briefcase, he is ready for the bomb blast
    Ah this terrorism, wasting and killing lots
    Just the battle of race and sexes
    It has already killed enough with its cruel shots

    Out of his mind
    He works and works
    Keep on doing his dirty work
    In the alley, the little girl shrieks
    "Beware of the evil that lurks!"

    A very dark night
    Full of silent horror
    Evil again regaining power

    Using him as a tool
    Making him a fool
    Controlling him
    His mind, his soul
    His doings and his fate
    Developing his personality
    Into what everyone would hate

    Treating him like a toy
    After it, they will destroy
    Destroy the world
    Destroy the very him

    After all he is just a toy they are playing with
    A doll being used as an actor in this drama of world

    These gods
    His creators
    Have no pity
    They try to be witty
    But killing people
    And creating a DEVIL
    I think is really ****ty
    Interesting interpretation, Pensy. And you know, somehow, when we first read the poem, we missed the rhyme sceme and read it “Reality” and thought why you should censure it, but then we understood.

    And
    He can't guess what's happening around
    Whoever is playing with him, he can't merely think
    From a human being, he is made a machine
    Who can't sing, who in front of his controllers, can't even blink

    ***

    Quote Originally Posted by Pendragon
    The Stork's Nest: Changes

    High above precariously perched atop the highest chimney,
    The bundle of sticks seems to be a monstrous thing;
    Down below, all the lights are on, and people are so busy—
    A young man ducks to one side as he hears his cell phone ring.
    Progress has came, and with it taken many of the legends we once heard,
    The television set replaced the books and nursery rhymes.
    In that nest of sticks up there, there lives a very special bird—
    Who would have never gone unnoticed in those slower times.
    Now the story that she brought humans their babies is only fairytale,
    Told by parents too embarrassed to try to explain the truer word.
    But when she built her nest upon the housetop, o’re the eves it’s shadow fell—
    And everyone rejoiced with gladness, for it was a good-luck bird!
    Time does more than change a village into busy cities that never are still:
    It steals from us things that we should treasure while we have them with us still…
    We liked the general tone of the poem, uncle Pen. It’s atmosphere is different from the others – lighter, more happier. The more classical form of the poem also stresses the point, in our opinion.

    ***
    Quote Originally Posted by Orionsbelt
    The call

    Dooooooooooooooooooooo, Dooooooooooooooo, click, Joe?
    Yeah! George. Look, I need you to know.
    Later, can we meet?
    There are unspoken things that I need to say.
    Face to face seems the best way.

    Sure George. Say four. Starbucks OK?
    We can meet at the office and walk a short way.
    Plan for a treat!
    They have in the window a white icing truff,
    Expresso, Frappuccino, and the regular stuff.

    Ahhhh, great! Don’t worry. Forgive my tone.
    Some years I have carried a secret alone.
    It’s good, a warm place to eat.
    The weight this burden I do want to end.
    Joe as always you are a good friend

    Say George can you give a glimmer or hint?
    I’m not a fast talker, my thoughts do not sprint.
    Simple, and sweet.
    As a friend I have moved to some concern.
    What ails my companion, I would like to learn.

    The trouble grows larger each passing day.
    It’s not easy to keep things from you in this way.
    Please wait to meet.
    Like a dark cloud in the air it presses on me.
    Some sun in the sky I am longing to see.
    We liked the last stanza, and that the form of the poem was a cell phone call. Starting it with “Doooooooooooooooo, dooooooooooooo” made us smile.
    And we miss sun too.
    ***
    Quote Originally Posted by Petrarch's love
    The roots of heaven descend in a balled up mass,
    And below in the dingy light
    The message is lost in a bad connection,
    The coming unseen in the night,
    The eyes below fixed on streets below as they pass.

    Tall spires reach out toward heaven to touch the gray
    Some end in the sign of the cross
    Some finish in an offering of smog incense
    And all blink with a pulse of loss
    As red lights keep things that fly in the dark at bay.

    With his hearing trained on the faint voice in the phone,
    The young man misses the sharp scream
    That emerges from the alleyway behind him
    And he walks, wrapped in his own dream,
    With all the others, through a nightmare, toward home.

    Passing through the maze of streets, at last they also pass
    (They hope) to heaven and to bliss.
    But those creatures below, How can they blame God’s sins?
    How can they hope for grace when this
    Is the earth the roots of heaven grow in?
    Wow! This poem has a nightmarish, dark tone that we enjoyed very much. Especially these lines:
    The roots of heaven descend in a balled up mass,
    And below in the dingy light
    The message is lost in a bad connection,
    Some end in the sign of the cross
    Some finish in an offering of smog incense
    and the last lines really have impact:
    How can they hope for grace when this
    Is the earth the roots of heaven grow in?
    ***
    Quote Originally Posted by Arania
    Funny, you know
    How time presses forward
    In scenes such as these --
    And you call me a coward!

    Sit tight and I'll show you
    Ambition's the key
    To removing the madness,
    Miss Earth? Who is she?

    Have you noticed I see it?
    The thing passing by
    Oh there -- to the side now
    That man with one eye.

    Sit tightly! I'll teach you
    To see what is there
    Relax - Watch the teacher
    Don't worry, I'll share.

    Remember the task now
    Look closely, you'll see
    Right there - by the trashcan
    The real world? Who's he?
    We found these lines especially amusing:
    Miss Earth? Who is she?
    The real world? Who's he?
    If you believe even a half of this post, you are severely mistaken.

  15. #495
    Serious business Taliesin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matsiah
    Lacy metal overpass,
    I've seen shades of the greenest grass,
    Among other shades are cool glades,
    'Twas beside a brick barrier, fortifier, or gate,
    'Twas of perfect use, when shown irate,
    'Tis of induced serenity when near,
    What is there to fear here... nothing,
    Even the trees cast sightly songs of peace,
    A true place of freely existing,
    All who've seen left missing and longing,
    Picture this long and tapered entrance of stone,
    Stone that reflects radiantly... all shown,
    Behind stone of romancing,
    'Tis many 'o species prancing,
    Faint singsong stretches my way,
    This home reminds me of pure joy within today,
    Seeing species casts at me meanings,
    If I weren't there I'd still not it's steaming hot,
    Almost as Palm Springs, but not,
    Picture this threefold heat mold,
    Though humidity keeps a far from deep fold,
    'Tis shallow,
    For whom can swim?
    Not I,
    Perfect.
    We like the a bit archaic style (‘twas, ‘tis) but we think that your poem was inspired by some other picture - you mentioned in your comment that somehow you saw two of them.
    But a good poem anyhow, serene and full of greenery.

    ***

    Quote Originally Posted by dramasnot6
    The Conversation

    Branching from the orb of human existence
    Enclosing my thoughts in designer bags
    As I step from my building
    With the others, all identical with tags

    Hello, it’s me, I’m calling
    Sorry, but I’m terrible with names
    Just thought I’d be remembered
    An exception in midnight games

    Only freckled neon that surrounds me
    Red lipstick and red lights a brush from bright
    Yet my dim composure insidiously blinds me
    Trading livelihood for bitter sight

    Just hoped you got home safe
    Watched the news, I think there was a storm
    You left so quickly
    What scene did you perform?

    My mind turns to sweeter days
    When the heart, boundless, sunk its teeth
    Back then misty evenings had no ways
    Ending nights with sheets beneath

    Oh, I’m terribly sorry
    Will your mother be okay?
    You used my favorite story
    Lies are great fillers of the day

    A passion becomes clandestine then turns to dust
    Impaled by carnal candles from the gut
    My fingers pinch the cell phone, kills candle’s flame
    Door creaks open, found the window firmly shut

    Do tell me when we meet again
    Preferably when you are coldest to touch
    Don’t bother with a note this time
    Easier when there is emptiness to clutch

    Immune to city smoke selling whispers
    Retching from the alienation of my soul
    Crosswalk lined with paths of solitude and hiding
    The looming darkness of urban control

    I’ll have to call you back.
    A very good poem.
    We like the rhyming and the touches of irony:
    Hello, it’s me, I’m calling
    Sorry, but I’m terrible with names
    Just thought I’d be remembered
    An exception in midnight games
    Oh, I’m terribly sorry
    Will your mother be okay?
    You used my favorite story
    Lies are great fillers of the day
    Do tell me when we meet again
    Preferably when you are coldest to touch
    Don’t bother with a note this time
    Easier when there is emptiness to clutch
    And the last line stands out because it is out of stanzas and therefore one notices it better and it has more effect to end the poem.
    ***

    Quote Originally Posted by Riesa
    falling evening beats it’s
    slow pulse,
    pushes
    grey to black,
    obscuring
    day’s shimmering
    nucleus
    in an obsidian nest

    a million mill-stoned
    voices rise
    above the bones of a church
    to the hovering
    technical God engorged to
    starry magnitude
    by the city’s
    electric impulses

    The voice of
    home tempts
    in candlelit tones,
    (Come, be still.)

    but he blends elementally
    with the undercurrent
    and finds it is
    increasingly difficult
    to deny
    the hinting shadows.
    We like the freeform lines, it gives the whole poem an interesting rhytm.

    And these lines we especially liked.
    obscuring
    day’s shimmering
    nucleus
    in an obsidian nest

    a million mill-stoned
    voices rise
    above the bones of a church
    to the hovering
    technical God engorged to
    starry magnitude
    by the city’s
    electric impulses

    The decision was difficult but the honour of posting the next picture belongs to Petrarch's love.
    If you believe even a half of this post, you are severely mistaken.

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