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	Posts: 21Threads: 5
 Joined: Apr 2013
 
	
	
		Nike and Boredom
 The state of things
 And how one tries
 To frame the vexing image
 (While it ever tears itself apart
 And stitches dominate the grain)
 
 Calls for swiftly
 Shifting glass, for
 Every sun's a virgin sight
 And we, as fruits of all its labours
 Merely inherit the fleeting day.
 
 It seems no cinch
 To keep one's feet
 Or, let alone one's cloudy eyes;
 The nature of our motion synthesizes with Earth's turn
 Though the way of stable insight is the aftermath of change.
 
 Yet there are those
 Who time again
 Attempt to render vision sharp,
 And so they gamble with perception
 In hopes - though maybe vain - of sense.
 
 Every present
 Carries colours
 Not yet shaded fine by time,
 But of today I mark it strange:
 Both golfers rich and skid row’s junkies
 Drape themselves in Nike.
 
 And ever more
 Condensed rain hangs
 In form of dark commercials blaring.
 Truly, to capitulate
 Ought not be how we drift.
 
 Though drift we must!
 Until the hands
 Of time tick t'wards their final bow.
 We've all the world outside our doors
 And all else at our fingers’ tips.
 
 Immerse yourself
 In pure time
 And this young cent'ry we'll define,
 But keep real sharp for if we don't,
 Chances are we'll just get bored.
 
		
	 
	
	
		I think there's a lot of tension here between a stiff, old way of writing and talking, and a kind-of-the-way of writing and talking-now-in-the-subject. 
 What that means is, the lines are very stressful, and that adds to the message. Stressful, like laborious, but not necessarily in a bad way.
 
 It works well in a way. But I don't know how well.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 2,602Threads: 303
 Joined: Feb 2017
 
	
	
		 (04-24-2013, 07:49 PM)lewis taylor Wrote:  Nike and Boredom
 The state of things
 And how one tries
 To frame the vexing image
 (While it ever tears itself apart
 And stitches dominate the grain)
 
 Calls for swiftly
 Shifting glass, for
 Every sun's a virgin sight
 And we, as fruits of all its labours
 Merely inherit the fleeting day.
 
 It seems no cinch
 To keep one's feet
 Or, let alone one's cloudy eyes;
 The nature of our motion synthesizes with Earth's turn
 Though the way of stable insight is the aftermath of change.
 
 Yet there are those
 Who time again
 Attempt to render vision sharp,
 And so they gamble with perception
 In hopes - though maybe vain - of sense.
 
 Every present
 Carries colours
 Not yet shaded fine by time,
 But of today I mark it strange:
 Both golfers rich and skid row’s junkies
 Drape themselves in Nike.
 
 And ever more
 Condensed rain hangs
 In form of dark commercials blaring.
 Truly, to capitulate
 Ought not be how we drift.
 
 Though drift we must!
 Until the hands
 Of time tick t'wards their final bow.
 We've all the world outside our doors
 And all else at our fingers’ tips.
 
 Immerse yourself
 In pure time
 And this young cent'ry we'll define,
 But keep real sharp for if we don't,
 Chances are we'll just get bored.
 
Hi Lewis,  
In a rush so will come back to this but I just know I will like it more than not. 
Best,  
tectak
 
  (04-24-2013, 07:49 PM)lewis taylor Wrote:  Hi lewis. OK. As I said, first read was encouraging so if I do a line by line what I don't mention is good!You have a style. I hope I don't make light of it. There is a novelty in the way your write which I find pleasing. Just a few niggles like potty line breaks and clott'd-cream ellisions which make you read like a Cornish yokel. You aren't a Cornish Yokel are you. Apologies if so. Carry on. Oh, and one last thing, try to clarify, not obfuscate. It is easy to be obscure...believe meNike and Boredom
 
 The state of thingsThis opening line is one of those unfortunate cliches which is spontaneous...it is just bound to happen....and it has. Severally. Check yourself. Still...
 And how one tries
 To frame the vexing image
 (While it ever tears itself apart
 And stitches dominate the grain)The line start does not need, or benefit from, the retro habit of capitalising. It is just confusing. It is made MUCH worse by your conjunctionitis. "And", strangely, takes away from a piece. Two "ands" in one stanza is too much. Though I cannot get the whole meaning out of this stanza I feel it is my fault. You may disagree.
 
 Calls for swiftly
 Shifting glass, for
 Every sun's a virgin sightTry semicolon here and omit the bloody "and"on the next line. This works, I think
 And we, as fruits of all its laboursCliche
 Merely inherit the fleeting day.Cliche
 
 It seems no cinchCute word use...maybe not mainstream but apposite
 To keep one's feet
 Or, let alone one's cloudy eyes;I find I like this line but wince a bit at "cloudy eyes".
 The nature of our motion synthesizes with Earth's turnAh. Now we have a problem. Do you mean synthesizes? It is the wrong word. Do you mean "synchronizes"? If you MEANT the former it is nonsense masquerading as profound.
 Though the way of stable insight is the aftermath of change.Bugger. I like this,to0, but find myself completely unable to say why. I think it is purely the sonics. It reads aloud beautifully. (I once got breakfast everyday in a University Buffet, which I was not entitled to, by shrugging and saying "Mais je suis Paul Smythe de la confiture" to the serving ladies. No one knew what it meant but I got the breakfast. I could have said "Ah, but the way of stable insight is the aftermath of change...with beans, please".) Sorry. Flippant....so what does it mean ?
 
 Yet there are those
 Who time again
 Attempt to render vision sharp,
 And so they gamble with perception
 In hopes - though maybe vain - of sense.Quite
 
 Every present
 Carries colours
 Not yet shaded fine by time,
 But of today I mark it strange:
 Both golfers rich and skid row’s junkies
 Drape themselves in Nike.Love this whole stanza in COMPLETE ISOLATION. I would ditch the rest. This is good.
 
 And ever more
 Condensed rain hangs
 In form of dark commercials blaring.
 Truly, to capitulate
 Ought not be how we drift.
 
 Though drift we must!
 Until the hands cliche coming
 Of time tick t'wards their final bow.cliche ends with a fourish of mixed metaphor. Bowing hands? What point to "t'wards". None
 We've all the world outside our doors
 And all else at our fingers’ tips.
 
 Immerse yourself
 In pure time
 And this young cent'ry we'll define,A glaring affectation, this "centr'y" thing. Why have you started d'ing it? Don't.
 But keep real sharp for if we don't,
 Chances are we'll just get bored.
  . I knew I would like it. Best,
 tectak
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 21Threads: 5
 Joined: Apr 2013
 
	
	
		Thanks a lot for the criticism. This was one of those poems that's sparked by what you think is a great idea, and in time turns out to be a lot harder to write (properly) than you'd thought. Anyway, I've taken what you've said on board and done a little edit, I agree that it was all a little vague and your notations of irritating word use and cliches are pretty justified. Here's the next drought...
 Boredom and Nike
 
 How vexing it
 must be to frame
 the picture of today
 (while it ever tears itself apart
 and only stitches form the grain).
 
 Surely you’d want
 shifting lenses!
 Every sun's a virgin sight,
 lending light to all those who
 are sweeping through the fleeting day.
 
 It seems no cinch
 to keep one's feet,
 or let alone one's  tired eyes;
 the nature of our motion synchronizes with Earth's turn,
 though the way of stable insight is the aftermath of change.
 
 Yet there are those
 who time again
 attempt to render vision sharp,
 and so they gamble with perception
 in hopes - though maybe vain - of sense.
 
 Every present
 carries colours
 not yet shaded fine by time,
 but of today I mark it strange:
 both golfers rich and skid row’s junkies
 drape themselves in Nike.
 
 Why, ever more
 condensed rain hangs
 in form of dark commercials blaring.
 Truly, to capitulate
 ought not be how we drift.
 
 Though drift we must!
 For apathy
 in time becomes regret.
 We've all the world outside our doors
 and all else at our fingers’ tips.
 
 Immerse yourself
 in pure time
 and this young century we'll define.
 But keep real sharp for if we don't,
 chances are we'll just get bored.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
	Posts: 2,602Threads: 303
 Joined: Feb 2017
 
	
	
		 (04-26-2013, 04:18 PM)lewis taylor Wrote:  Thanks a lot for the criticism. This was one of those poems that's sparked by what you think is a great idea, and in time turns out to be a lot harder to write (properly) than you'd thought. Anyway, I've taken what you've said on board and done a little edit, I agree that it was all a little vague and your notations of irritating word use and cliches are pretty justified. Here's the next drought... Here, have a Coke 
 Boredom and Nike
 
 How vexing it
 must be to frame
 the picture of today
 (while it ever tears itself apart
 and only stitches form the grain).
 
 Could I suggest, as you are still breaking lines and stanzas haphazardly, that you begin a process of grouping. See below:
 
 How vexing it must be to frame
 the picture of today;
 while it  tears itself apart
 and only stitches make the grain.
 Surely you would  want a shifting lens?
 
 
 Every sun's a virgin sight,
 to all those who in borrowed light
 are sweeping through the fleeting day.
 
 It seems no cinch to keep one's feet,
 or let alone one's  tired eyes;
 each turn of Earth by nature, our motions synchronize,
 though the way of stable insight
 is the aftermath of change.
 
 Yet there are those who time again
 attempt to render vision sharp,
 so they gamble with perception
 in vain hope of making sense.
 
 Every present carries colours
 not yet shaded fine by time,
 but of today I mark it strange;
 both golfers rich and skid row’s junkies
 drape themselves in Nike.
 
 For ever more condensed rain hangs
 in form of dark commercial's blare.
 Truly, to capitulate ought not be how we drift.
 Though drift we must for apathy, in time, becomes regret.
 We've all the world outside our doors
 and all else at our fingers’ tips.
 
 Immerse yourself  in distilled time
 and this young century we'll define.
 But keep real sharp for if we don't,
 the chances are we'll just get bored.
 
This is only my cursory take. It only took a couple of minutes. A lot more can be done, especially if you want consistency in your stanzas. Enjoy the process but please ignore my suggestions if you so wish. It is your poem. I changed "form" to "make" in S1 to avoid the repeat.  
Best, 
tectak
	 
		
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