Snow Globe
By camilla
Thu, 08 Dec 2011
- 2176 reads
4 comments
Permutations of pupils
swirled to the front and sang
not just
"The Coventry Carol"
but "And the Glory" and
"Lullay My Liking"
with monastic harmonies
perfectly entwined
and then we walked through a deserted little
town with all the lights lit
and quietly blinking
Churches and Abbey gates
were silvered by moonlight and stars
One of the pubs even had glitter
inside its windows
its red plush seats dressed with gold
mulled wine on the tables
But up North in the Western Isles
and
Argyll and Bute
someone is shaking the snow globe
very hard indeed
Romantic as long as one doesn't really
need
the shipping forecast
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Comments
1 User voted this as great feedback
I like the contrast between
I like the contrast between romance and reality. I also like the way you have described the romantic notion with a modern day dickensian feel and yet summed up the reality with just a simple phrase: someone is shaking the snow globe very hard indeed. This extra contrast between detailed and simple description really lifts the poem.
Also the switch between romance and reality, when it comes, is well handled and seems to add more...I don't know...definition to the piece.
Definite yes from me.
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I enjoyed this one Makes me
I enjoyed this one
Makes me homesick for "...up North in the Western Isles and Argyll and Bute..."
ScoZen
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