I try so hard to help you
but just as I’m about to grasp your hand
our fingertips briefly kissing in desperation
Deeper and deeper into the chasm you fall
as the darkness envelops you
a fair-weathered friend to cushion your impact
only to disappear as you become acquainted.
I can hear your silent screams
that emit from your horrified mouth
which forms a perfect circle of gentle surprise
though the calmness of the rest of your face
betrays exactly how many times you’ve gone through this routine of falling.
My piercing screams are less subtle
loud only in a room filled with thousands of chatting people
because this routine of yours
is a heartbreaking tragedy to me
that which I refuse to become accustomed.
though the discord to our harmony
remind both of us you’re still falling
anticipating the welcoming ledge below with wide arms
that’s going to break your fall
but it’s there I’ll be waiting with even wider arms
to carry you back to the top
(Group Critique // Thank you!)
@love-is-overrated-and-addicting
__________________________
for me, ‘a promise’ touches upon an important topic - how those who are close to one who has depression may feel and react. the poet succeeds in conveying that sense of frustration.
read out loud, the poem flows very well, and the ending is strong.
that being said, there is a major issue. while the overall theme is tight, the specifics feel scattered, and i think it comes across that way because the narrator is physically ungrounded.
first, we are at the top of the chasm. then, we are cushioning the impact at the bottom. we then hear the subject’s screaming. next we ourselves are screaming in a loud room (what room and where did the chasm go?). finally, we are back at the chasm, with the ledge.
obviously, the poet does not intend the above physicalities to be literal, but something needs to be done to tie it all together in regards to location and chronology. (i might not cut the room out altogether - the concept fits in very well with the general theme.)
while i don’t know how common the concept of ‘kissing fingertips’ is, i quite enjoyed seeing that.
a “fair weather friend” would be the one that abandons others during hard times, not the one to comfort.
“chatting” is the only word i found to be a bit jarring when i read the poem out loud.
“though the discord” - should it be ‘though’ or ‘through’?
i like the ‘horrified mouth / gentle surprise’, screaming vs. calm contradictions. they make total sense.
@reinventing-wednesday response:
I agree with @cruxymox with the lines about ‘kissing fingertips’ and horrified mouth / gentle surprise’. I like the uniqueness of the concept of fingertips kissing, and enjoyed the contrast of screaming vs calm contradictions that he mentions.
This reads too long for me, I would consider condensing it, or maybe revising it into a prose piece. It can work as a longer poem, but it needs to be constructed so the reader knows where they are when they are reading the poem. As cruxy mentioned, it goes from being at the top of the chasm, to the bottom, then screaming, and so on. Try revising the lines themselves and placing them in a chronological order. Reading it out loud helps with line breaks, some of them end abruptly and it throws off the meter of the poem. If you do keep this as a poem, break it up with stanzas to wrap it up a bit. That can make lines have more of an impact, and the extra pause allows the reader time to process before moving on.
I would replace the use of ‘fair weather friend’, I don’t know why but this tripped me up when I read it. Omitting that line and the next would help with the flow, or changing it up a bit would help too. I also think the word ‘chatting’ doesn’t fit right. It doesn’t match the maturity in this piece.
I would love to see this more as a prose piece. It feels like there is so much more that you wanted to say, so much more detail that could have been provided if it wasn’t in poem format.
Thanks for submitting, and please do so again!
@renegadegirl13 response:
I can't say very much outside of repeating what the others did. Here are my thoughts: When I first scanned this piece, I felt it overwhelmed as a poem. A prose piece would be more fitting. Your use of fair weather friend is appropriate, once the next line is read. Then later, you are there to cushion the fall... Where is the continuity? The imagery is good, though a bit scattered. Your lines are too "run-on for poetry and lack punctuation. Try re-reworking this using the suggestions provided. Thanks for sharing.
I enjoyed the imagery here a lot, and you have a lot of solid, visual lines. You've patented beautiful, thought provoking imagery in this and that should be celebrated.
Lets touch on one thing: punctuation. This piece needs punctuation. Breaks in lines tell readers where to pause but it does not tell readers how you want them to pause. A comma, a long dash, periods-- punctuation is necessary to drive the emphasis of your emotions across. If you dont utilize dashes and commas besides just periods, your piece looks like one long run-on sentence. And that is not what you want. Because of that, I feel like 90% of your issues with this poem would be resolved.
As it is, because of how much emphasis you have put into descriptions, Less is More may not work for you. Agreeing with others, this should either be a Long Line Poem (look into C.K. Williams) or it needs to be prose, plain and simple. You do have a sense of scattering about the piece and at times it does feel like I'm reading more than one poem here. Consider omitting lines or phrases that dont drive the emotional context home.
And that's another thing-- I'm not emotionally drawn into this. There is no AHA moment or a "but" moment to give it clarity that the reader can relate to. You have all these beautiful lines filled with imagery but it's unsettled and unpersonable.
Consider where the others have pointed out for you on what to edit and look to add more emotional depth and form to this. You've created beauty but it's not complete. You've definitely got the ability to bring it home.