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		Final edit for now thanks to all for the help
 In heavy rain
 underneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.
 
 You'd burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 our summers waiting
 for your first smile.
 
 I'd like to think it was the sunlight
 filtered through the white blossom,
 that found the corner of your mouth
 and snatched away your breath,
 but they never really told us.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the farm yard mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me
 close the door.
 
 I pour myself some tea
 and look to the garden,
 the trees now are fully grown,
 and still they lay down
 their blankets,
 giving up each short life
 to help keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 Edit 2
 
 In heavy rain
 underneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you, watched you,
 swirling into eddies, watered down
 sinking underground.
 
 Maybe it was the sunlight,
 filtered through the white blossom,
 or Spring's first false whisper
 that found the corner of your mouth,
 carried you away,
 a milky sweetness on the breeze,
 drifting out beyond the trees,
 trading your breath as nectar
 to help each flower grow.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime
 that made me close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees have grown
 yet still they lay down their blankets,
 giving up each bright short life
 to keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 Edit 01 Ray, achebe, Todd.
 
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 flickered above your troubled face.
 
 Morning couldn't help itself,
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects came out to play
 and you,
 you were lost in a lullaby
 that whispered tones of sky blue.
 
 Maybe it was the milk bubbles
 at the corner of your mouth
 that carried you away,
 a moments sweetness on the breeze,
 trading your breath as nectar to each flower.
 
 I've read all the other theories
 
 In heavy rain
 underneath those same branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me
 close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
 
 
 Original
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting
 for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 softened the sting
 on delicate eyes.
 It was a perfect morning
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects had come to play
 and you were lost to its
 lullaby.
 
 I would like to think
 the beauty of that day
 took away your breath
 but there are other theories
 I've read too many times.
 
 On a cold blustery day
 underneath those branches
 we dispersed you, watered down
 swirling into eddies
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our empty home
 I made tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid
 their blankets over you,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Sometimes all we can do is make tea. This is a wonderful poem.
 01      We nearly called you May
 02      but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 03      you burst bright into life
 04      all pink and white,
 05      summer still waiting
 06      for your smile.
 07
 08      The pram could move
 09      from car to cradle,
 10      carried under filtered sunlight,
 11      a cherry flower canopy
 12      softened the sting
 13      on delicate eyes.
 14      It was a perfect morning
 15      the damp had just left the ground,
 16      insects had come to play
 17      and you were lost to its
 18      lullaby.
 19
 ----------------------------------------------------------
 5-6 Combine them to make one line?
 12 maybe another word than "sting"
 13 "on your delicate eyes" ?
 13-14 add line break between 13 and 14
 
 16 I'd add a "the" at the first
 17 I know "its" refers to "morning" and not "insects"
 because one's plural and one ain't but...
 there's still a bit of a stumble there for the reader
 
 17 why not "lost in"
 18 combine with 17
 ----------------------------------------------------------
 20      I would like to think
 21      the beauty of that day
 22      took away your breath
 23      but there are other theories
 24      I've read too many times.
 25
 26      On a cold blustery day
 27      underneath those branches
 28      we dispersed you, watered down
 29      swirling into eddies
 30      sinking underground.
 31
 32      In the quiet of our empty home
 33      I made tea
 34      and looked to the garden,
 35      the trees had laid
 36      their blankets over you,
 37      giving up their short life
 38      to keep you warm,
 39
 40      as they do every year.
 ------------------------------------------------------
 23-24 need re-phrasing -- just deleting 24 sort of works, but no...
 it needs to be stated differently
 or maybe you could delete both and leave it to the reader
 deleting both works for me
 
 26 "cold" is unnecessary
 27 "those same" instead of "those" ?
 
 28-30 need to be rephrased
 "watered down" seems awkward to me
 maybe:
 we dispersed you
 watched you
 as you settled to the ground
 this leaves out the water's action, which I love,
 but maybe it's necessary?
 anyway, you need to re-work it
 
 32 "empty" isn't necessary
 36 "blanket", no need for plural
 37 "their" is confusing as it seems to refer to the trees
 leaves have a short life, but trees don't -- rephrase
 
 Hope that helps. A beautiful poem; has a heart to it
 that will out no matter how it's phrased.
 
                                                                                                                           a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (01-29-2016, 06:40 PM)Keith Wrote:  We nearly called you May but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting
 for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 softened the sting
 on delicate eyes.  above 4 lines - beautiful
 It was a perfect morning
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects had come to play one too many 'hads'?
 and you were lost to its
 lullaby.
 
 I would like to think
 the beauty of that day a bit bland
 took away your breath
 but there are other theories
 I've read too many times.
 
 On a cold blustery day double adjective mars the line
 underneath those branches
 we dispersed you, watered down
 swirling into eddies
 sinking underground. nice image
 
 In the quiet of our empty home
 I made tea unexpected and effective
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid
 their blankets over you,
 giving up their short life beautiful
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
thanks for the read
	 
~ I think I just quoted myself - Achebe
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Keith, 
This is really beautiful work. There are a few adjustments you can make that will really bring this one out even more fully. Here are some thoughts:
  (01-29-2016, 06:40 PM)Keith Wrote:  We nearly called you May but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting
 for your smile.--Moving from static naming to the motion of life. The entire burst sequence to the end--effective, visual, I'm fully hooked at this point.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,--filtered is such a nice choice to show the bubble we want to build around babies to protect them.
 a cherry flower canopy
 softened the sting
 on delicate eyes.--delicate is almost a call out for me. I'm not totally against it but it reads a bit shorthand to me. There may be a better option to get here.
 It was a perfect morning --While I realize that there's irony in this line, it still feels like the poem would be stronger without it, or with some reworked alternative. It's just very flat reportage sounding next to everything else. In a worse poem it wouldn't stand out as much.
 the damp had just left the ground,--lovely phrasing
 insects had come to play
 and you were lost to its--Its doesn't feel right here.
 lullaby. --Given the content this is an effective one word line. It's a very sad one word line, but it has the power to hold its place.
 
 I would like to think
 the beauty of that day--Something more specific here rather than the abstract bland beauty of that day. It would work fine in prose but falls flat here.
 took away your breath --Strong in its restraint.
 but there are other theories
 I've read too many times.
 
 On a cold blustery day
 underneath those branches--reminds of when the bough breaks
 we dispersed you, watered down--This sequence to the end of the strophe is powerful.
 swirling into eddies
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our empty home--There may be a line you can add after the subtly captures the feeling of this quiet more. You may optionally want to dig into the reader more.
 I made tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid
 their blankets over you,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.--gorgeous, sad payoff. No complaints on how you handled this.
 
Again lovely work, Keith.
 
Best,
 
Todd
	
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Ray, Achebe and Todd,Please don't think me rude for not coming back sooner, each time I tried an edit nothing was really working, anyway, thank you very much for all your comments, the feedback you gave was excellent, giving me lots to take into the edit. I think I have addressed most issues but may have gone a bit over the top. Once again many thanks. Best Keith
 
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		I finally got round to a second edit.
	 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Joined: Oct 2010
 
	
	
		Hi Keith, 
It's a lot different but still thematically on point. I worry that I'm reading the original into this version and I wonder if the subject would come across as clearly without the opening about names or the pram. It's a concern but it's still a lovely poem.
  (01-29-2016, 06:40 PM)Keith Wrote:  Edit 2
 In heavy rain--I could also view heavy rain as a metaphor for depression and loss
 underneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,--Possibly pull up watered down to have that parallel structure closer on one line.
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.--Your sonics here are gorgeous (assonance, consonance). It also flows well with the content underneath, underground. The entire swirling into eddies. This idea of going into the underworld.
 
 Maybe it was the sunlight,
 filtered through the white blossom,--lovely image
 or springs first false whisper--I love first false whisper. While you don't have to capitalize spring as your not personifying it that completely. I think you do need an apostrophe spring's.
 that found the corner of your mouth,
 carried you away,
 a milky sweetness on the breeze,--That is a poignant line. The loss through a smell. Nice choice
 drifting out beyond the trees,
 trading your breath as nectar
 to help each flower grow.--Love this return to the earth and blend with nature imagery. There is renewal but there is loss.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot--This sets the age and gives a hint of who the you is mentioned above.
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me--Not liking the break on me. Perhaps on made or close.
 close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life--the comparison is strong.
 to keep you warm,
 as they do every year.--There is such a back and forth sorrow/wistful sense about this. Strong close.
 
I think the revision is an improvement though you still may want to alter the title to include some aspect of "They Wanted to Name You Blossom" into it. I think the title needs to carry slightly more exposition to keep the emotional connection strong throughout.
 
This was and continues to be one of my favorite pieces by you.
 
Best,
 
Todd
	
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		@toddThank you for your continued support with the poem, I must say I share your concern about how the edit comes across when stood alone. That's the main reason I move up the scattering of ashes because I wanted to put down the breadcrumbs for the reader. It definitely needs a new title as it was originally a NaPo poem, problem is I suck at titles, so need to try harder. I've looked at everything you comment on and made a few tweets as suggested. Thank again Keith
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		In heavy rainunderneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you, watched you,
 swirling into eddies, watered down
 sinking underground.
 
 Maybe it was the sunlight,
 filtered through the white blossom,
 or Spring's first false whisper
 that found the corner of your mouth,
 carried you away,
 a milky sweetness on the breeze,
 drifting out beyond the trees,
 trading your breath as nectar
 to help each flower grow.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime
 that made me close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 
 Keith
 It's a beautiful, precious, poem
 I liked every version.
 Poetry is what you do,
 and you do it very well.
 
 nibbed
 
there's always a better reason to love
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		@NibbedThank you for the kind words. Best Keith
 
If your undies fer you've been smoking through em, don't peg em out
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Joined: Oct 2015
 
	
	
		I liked the names in the previous version, which gave the poem a personal touch.  (01-29-2016, 06:40 PM)Keith Wrote:  Edit 2
 In heavy rain
 underneath dripping branches ..I like 'dripping branches'
 we dispersed you, watched you, ...don't like the second 'you'. Maybe 'dispersed you, watched/ as you swirled etc'
 swirling into eddies, watered down
 sinking underground. ....this is a fine sentence, but reads too much like prose. I wonder if it might not be better to do away with
 
 Maybe it was the sunlight,
 filtered through the white blossom,
 or Spring's first false whisper
 that found the corner of your mouth,
 carried you away, ... I think 'maybe' weakens the strophe overall, because it's obviously imagined anyway.
 a milky sweetness on the breeze,
 drifting out beyond the trees,
 trading your breath as nectar
 to help each flower grow. ...the second strophe is a bit overdone. Don't have any suggestions though
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting, ...'lemon walls' is a favourite
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime
 that made me close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down ....the line length reads a little awkward to me. I'd have preferred '....laid down their blankets / etc'
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 Edit 01 Ray, achebe, Todd.
 
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 flickered above your troubled face.
 
 Morning couldn't help itself,
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects came out to play
 and you,
 you were lost in a lullaby
 that whispered tones of sky blue.
 
 Maybe it was the milk bubbles
 at the corner of your mouth
 that carried you away,
 a moments sweetness on the breeze,
 trading your breath as nectar to each flower.
 
 I've read all the other theories
 
 In heavy rain
 underneath those same branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me
 close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
 
 
 Original
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting
 for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 softened the sting
 on delicate eyes.
 It was a perfect morning
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects had come to play
 and you were lost to its
 lullaby.
 
 I would like to think
 the beauty of that day
 took away your breath
 but there are other theories
 I've read too many times.
 
 On a cold blustery day
 underneath those branches
 we dispersed you, watered down
 swirling into eddies
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our empty home
 I made tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid
 their blankets over you,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
~ I think I just quoted myself - Achebe
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I have read all three iterations and liked all three separately for different qualities.
 I think the third is the best for the music to it and the strangeness but it almost reads like a separate poem than the first which was already quite good.
 
 The ending feels /just right/ - so right in fact that it is easy to miss the chronological dissonance of it.
 
 Still, once you have caught it, it niggles at you until you can't ignore it,
 
		
	 
	
	
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		Beautiful poem.  Felt like I was in your words.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		@achebe, thank you for your comments all really helpful that helped shape the edit.@milo, really appreciate the help milo, all in the edit and I tried to address the last stanza.
 @mandy, thank you for the kind words, best Keith
 
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		Hi Keith, 
This is a wonderful poem you've got here. Just a thought on the beginning below 
  (01-29-2016, 06:40 PM)Keith Wrote:  Final edit for now thanks to all for the helpOn the beginning, I do agree with Achebe on how the names were good. I enjoyed them for how personal they seemed to the narrator.
 In heavy rain
 underneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.
 
 You'd burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 our summers waiting
 for your first smile.
 
 I'd like to think it was the sunlight
 filtered through the white blossom,
 that found the corner of your mouth
 and snatched away your breath,
 but they never really told us.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the farm yard mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me
 close the door.
 
 I pour myself some tea
 and look to the garden,
 the trees now are fully grown,
 and still they lay down
 their blankets,
 giving up each short life
 to help keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 Edit 2
 
 In heavy rain
 underneath dripping branches
 we dispersed you, watched you,
 swirling into eddies, watered down
 sinking underground.
 
 Maybe it was the sunlight,
 filtered through the white blossom,
 or Spring's first false whisper
 that found the corner of your mouth,
 carried you away,
 a milky sweetness on the breeze,
 drifting out beyond the trees,
 trading your breath as nectar
 to help each flower grow.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime
 that made me close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees have grown
 yet still they lay down their blankets,
 giving up each bright short life
 to keep you warm,
 as they do every year.
 
 
 Edit 01 Ray, achebe, Todd.
 
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 flickered above your troubled face.
 
 Morning couldn't help itself,
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects came out to play
 and you,
 you were lost in a lullaby
 that whispered tones of sky blue.
 
 Maybe it was the milk bubbles
 at the corner of your mouth
 that carried you away,
 a moments sweetness on the breeze,
 trading your breath as nectar to each flower.
 
 I've read all the other theories
 
 In heavy rain
 underneath those same branches
 we dispersed you,
 watched you,
 watered down swirling into eddies,
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our home
 lemon walls were waiting,
 the mobile above your cot
 clicked on,
 a single chime that made me
 close the door.
 
 I poured some tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid down
 their blankets,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
 
 
 Original
 We nearly called you May
 but they wanted to name you Blossom,
 you burst bright into life
 all pink and white,
 summer still waiting
 for your smile.
 
 The pram could move
 from car to cradle,
 carried under filtered sunlight,
 a cherry flower canopy
 softened the sting
 on delicate eyes.
 It was a perfect morning
 the damp had just left the ground,
 insects had come to play
 and you were lost to its
 lullaby.
 
 I would like to think
 the beauty of that day
 took away your breath
 but there are other theories
 I've read too many times.
 
 On a cold blustery day
 underneath those branches
 we dispersed you, watered down
 swirling into eddies
 sinking underground.
 
 In the quiet of our empty home
 I made tea
 and looked to the garden,
 the trees had laid
 their blankets over you,
 giving up their short life
 to keep you warm,
 
 as they do every year.
 
Again, the final edit is a wonderful read. The imagery is so crisp and reads warmly in spite of the subject (forgive me if I'm wrong) being the death of a baby son/daughter. Thank you kindly for the read.
	
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		@alexorande Thank you for you comment, I have desided to park this one for a while and come back to it with fresh eyes. I will consider you comment about names when I do. And yes you have interpreted the subject correctly. Best Keith
	 
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		Keith,
 I'm all for pruning, but I read the final version first and it really made little sense to me, until I went back and read the earlier drafts. You cut some very beautiful lines.
 
 "its" should be "theirs"
 
 best,
 
 
 dale
 
How long after picking up the brush, the first masterpiece?
 The goal is not to obfuscate that which is clear, but make clear that which isn't.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (10-07-2017, 03:28 AM)Erthona Wrote:  Keith,
 I'm all for pruning, but I read the final version first and it really made little sense to me, until I went back and read the earlier drafts. You cut some very beautiful lines.
 
 "its" should be "theirs"
 
 best,
 
 
 dale
 
Thanks Erthona, yes I need to let this one settle a little while. I didnt know I had an its that should be a theirs, I'll need to look harder. Best Keith
	 
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		I miss the milk bubbles from edit 1. Just want to let you know for when you come around to this again, or for something else, it was perfect to me.
	 
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