Sanity Sustain Me

AuthorMessage
Milk
King For A Couple Of Days
Milk
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 3741

Mibba Blog
June 24th, 2006 at 05:45am
I haven't wrote in awhile, this one isn't done... but it's as done as it will ever get.

Sanity Sustain Me
Like the tears of a thousand eyes
One will only wonder what ahead lies
Bittersweet thoughts of death
Hold the gun to my head and take my last breath

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Of course there is one thing I cannot heed
Sanity sustain me, merciless greed
Misery enjoys my company
Yet one day I will be set free

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Dance this dance on tables of hate
What controls your moves is only fate
Whispered silence, one and only
The dance of death is oh so lonely

Slashing through the midnight air
Asking yourself ‘Is it fair?’
But you know that’s not true
Life was never fair to you
Kitti
Falling In Love With The Board
Kitti
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 5688
June 24th, 2006 at 08:48am
Like the tears of a thousand eyes
One will only wonder what ahead lies
Bittersweet thoughts of death
Hold the gun to my head and take my last breath

While I love the idea of numbers, multiples, and reflections in poetry and it's a great way to open a poem/song/whatever, I think you set yourself up for a trite rhyme scheme. That made your first stanza a bit cliche, but the last line really did it--the bit about the gun. How about alluding to the gun, but not saying it outright? Talk about the metal, how cold and smooth it is against your temple or something.

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Oh, hey, it looks like a song now! This stanza has great rhythm, but the flow is mediocre. The words are perhaps not the best to describe the idea, but the idea is great in that it's taking an unclear stance--is the lyrical voice going to kill itself? Who does win when you kill yourself? Great way to introduce serious conflict and still be subtle about it.

Of course there is one thing I cannot heed
Sanity sustain me, merciless greed
Misery enjoys my company
Yet one day I will be set free

I noticed now that you keep changing your rhyme scheme, but only by about one line at a time. Intentional? It works. I hate rhyme scheme, but if you can change it up, it reminds me a little less of limericks, which is good. The bolded line really blew my mind--the slight alliteration with sanity and sustain made the line really smooth, and the lines are all solid within the stanza.

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Hey, it's the other rhyme sceme again! Repeating this stanza is powerful. It's an echo of the conflict, that's great.

Dance this dance on tables of hate
What controls your moves is only fate
Whispered silence, one and only
The dance of death is oh so lonely

Tables of hate. Bravo. It's an expression I haven't heard before, but I can see it, it fits and it's effective. The thought of the last line seems to trail off though. I'd recommend ending the sentence less abiguously or at least adding punctuation to affirm that it is, in fact, the end of the sentence and stanza.

Slashing through the midnight air
Asking yourself ‘Is it fair?’
But you know that’s not true
Life was never fair to you

First line is gorgeous. But I don't know what's slashing, so pretty lines don't matter. Is what fair, and what's not true?
Ending a poem with a lot of questions doesn't usually work. You can keep ambiguity without asking rhetorical questions at all--use metaphors, allude to things and you won't confuse people unnecessarily.


Overall, pretty decent. Is it a poem, or a song?
Milk
King For A Couple Of Days
Milk
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 3741

Mibba Blog
June 25th, 2006 at 01:38am
Kitti:
Like the tears of a thousand eyes
One will only wonder what ahead lies
Bittersweet thoughts of death
Hold the gun to my head and take my last breath

While I love the idea of numbers, multiples, and reflections in poetry and it's a great way to open a poem/song/whatever, I think you set yourself up for a trite rhyme scheme. That made your first stanza a bit cliche, but the last line really did it--the bit about the gun. How about alluding to the gun, but not saying it outright? Talk about the metal, how cold and smooth it is against your temple or something.

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Oh, hey, it looks like a song now! This stanza has great rhythm, but the flow is mediocre. The words are perhaps not the best to describe the idea, but the idea is great in that it's taking an unclear stance--is the lyrical voice going to kill itself? Who does win when you kill yourself? Great way to introduce serious conflict and still be subtle about it.

Of course there is one thing I cannot heed
Sanity sustain me, merciless greed
Misery enjoys my company
Yet one day I will be set free

I noticed now that you keep changing your rhyme scheme, but only by about one line at a time. Intentional? It works. I hate rhyme scheme, but if you can change it up, it reminds me a little less of limericks, which is good. The bolded line really blew my mind--the slight alliteration with sanity and sustain made the line really smooth, and the lines are all solid within the stanza.

When you can’t take anymore
When you're sure it’s over and done
Take a knife to your throat
Ask yourself who has won?

Hey, it's the other rhyme sceme again! Repeating this stanza is powerful. It's an echo of the conflict, that's great.

Dance this dance on tables of hate
What controls your moves is only fate
Whispered silence, one and only
The dance of death is oh so lonely

Tables of hate. Bravo. It's an expression I haven't heard before, but I can see it, it fits and it's effective. The thought of the last line seems to trail off though. I'd recommend ending the sentence less abiguously or at least adding punctuation to affirm that it is, in fact, the end of the sentence and stanza.

Slashing through the midnight air
Asking yourself ‘Is it fair?’
But you know that’s not true
Life was never fair to you

First line is gorgeous. But I don't know what's slashing, so pretty lines don't matter. Is what fair, and what's not true?
Ending a poem with a lot of questions doesn't usually work. You can keep ambiguity without asking rhetorical questions at all--use metaphors, allude to things and you won't confuse people unnecessarily.


Overall, pretty decent. Is it a poem, or a song?
I'm not sure whether it's a poem or a song, but as I said, it's unfinished or it would be much better.
Inari
King For A Couple Of Days
Inari
Age: 37
Gender: Female
Posts: 2538
June 25th, 2006 at 04:55am
I really liked that.
I fell in love with these lines:
Dance this dance on tables of hate
What controls your moves is only fate
Whispered silence, one and only
The dance of death is oh so lonely
Emily-Cool
Falling In Love With The Board
Emily-Cool
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 6657
June 25th, 2006 at 11:45am
I thought it was pretty good! im not gonna critic evry verse but Slashing through the midnight air - thats a really good line, i really like it Smile
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