Loathsome (Poetry Monthly)
By Philip Sidney
- 6998 reads
Speech is difficult
words swell in my throat
become a glob of thick phlegm
that obstructs breath
heaves into my mouth, fills
then falls
green and slithering
into the grass as
toad, viper, frog -
they mean something
as they writhe
coldly
over my bare feet
I am as these creatures -
no longer touched by the revulsion
of others
I am shunned
by that strange
life of manners
that would have me silent
absent
rather than witness
the loathsome truth
that I must speak
honeyed words
falling
diamonds and pearls
from the mouth
of that one called
sister
meant nothing to me then
or now
I find I become more
myself
walking amongst trees
lying on the earth
touch
my primary sense
the rough language of bark
the sharpness of thorns
who knew plants could speak?
they whisper to me
as they breathe
I eat
when chance offers
the life of another -
fly, flower even
frog -
offspring of my own muddied thoughts -
all have passed between my lips
slipped
into my mouth
I am used to the
throb of final existence
upon
my tongue
I am thin
limbs like sapling
blood moves slowly
through raised blue veins
on hands like the underside of a leaf
no longer mine
there is comfort to be found
in moss and mud and
the eloquence
of birds.
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Comments
I'm quite taken back by your
I'm quite taken back by your structure in this piece Philip it seems such an extreme change of style, yet one held together with those powerful and evocative tried and true bones of the poet. For me, this:
"I am used to the
throb of final existence
upon
my tongue"
was the perfect bow to use to tie the rest of the poem into place and thus set the stage for an excellent finale. Nicely composed yet again [virtual pat on the same bruised spot] Philip
Rob
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Yes, well done then... a "Riv
Yes, well done then... a "Riv-vett"-ing piece.
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I am sure some critical
I am sure some critical feedback will be along in a bit, in the meantime, this is wonderful!
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It is wonderful. Not a
It is wonderful. Not a criticism, but I was looking hard because you asked us to and with a great effort at nit picking, I thought that in this line - 'the sharp piercing of thorns' - 'sharp' might not be needed. It might be, though. I just felt like patting myself on the back for the discovery of a superfluous word in such a polished poem. Well done me???
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Philip, a marvellous poem.
Philip, a marvellous poem. Have read it over and over, feels crafted to precision. The speech transformation is a repulsively attractive image, phlegmy reptiles all over the feet, cold and spewed up. Composition wise it's flawless. Exciting that you use one word lines in places - provides intonation and an animation all of its own. What were you listening to - an audio story?
Tiny tweaks I considered: Could you remove the 'as' and make it just 'diamonds and pearls'? It feels more of a statement than a comparative. Wouldn't interrupt your pattern dramatically.
'who knew that plants speak?' I felt it fitted your voice theme and was tidier
'almost without flesh' Know exactly what you mean but 'almost' didn't crystallise the image in my head. I can't suggest a substitute as still thinking.
Hope suggestions help rather than hinder, reject what irritates. Poet knows best. What a gem.
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Hi Philip. Maybe remove out
Hi Philip. Maybe remove out from breathe out? Not sure about using eloquence for birds. Something closer to chatter or music maybe? Eloquence suggests strength or effective construction of argument. Apologies if that is what you have in mind.
Sparing yet strong piece.
Parson Thru
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Sorry Philip. I was editing
Sorry Philip. I was editing it as you replied.
Parson Thru
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I have been attempting to
I have been attempting to comment all day on this! Have read and re-read it and find something more to take in each time..I'm kind of in awe!
It has a suitably haunting theme with the visual descriptions of the slithering toads, writhe coldly on bare feet- and the rough lanuage of bark is such a fantastic line! I am at odds to find anything I can suggest to enhance it- the only tiny thing I thought was in the last stanza-
'in mud and moss and' it may flow better 'in mud, moss and'..
Please disregard if you prefer the former- just my humble opinon, I thought it was excellent!
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I know you wanted critiques
I know you wanted critiques but I have read and re-read and can find no critisicm to offer. It was perfectly formed and very well executed. I may be missing grammer corrections as some comments above but I found none that bothered my ear. I think I will read it again....but just because I truly liked it.
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Hi Helen
Hi Helen
No chance of getting anything useful from me. I'm no expert in poetry. However, it is a startling poem, the images are very graphic. It's impressive.
Jean
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It is the sapling suppleness
It is the sapling suppleness of this poem and the unexpected imagery that whips the reader into a powerful response. A hell of an achievement. Really memorable.
I love best the stark lines such as:
I am shunned
by that strange
life of manners
that would have me silent...
and
I am used to the
throb of final existence
upon
my tongue
It is hard to make suggestions about such a striking piece of work and I have hesitated for quite a while.
But I would suggest keeping it sapling thin by avoiding phrases that might soften the poem's effect with familiarity, such as:
honeyed words
primary sense
muddied thoughts
Looking forward to the next piece...
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This is a great poem, no doubt about that.
You brilliantly portray some thing that has decended into vileness, my immediate thoughts were of Gollum and Emily Rose.
However, my personal choice would be to cut down the number of short one word lines. I am not against this style, I have used it myself, but with this poem I would prefer to see some more chunky stanzas with a little more punctuation, certainly link them with one/two word lines for drama, but not so many.
Also I think you could snip off a few more words, again to add to the impact you are looking for.
If you don't mind I give you an example:
Speech is difficult, words swell
in my throat: a glob of thick
phlegm obstructs breath, heaves
into my mouth, fills then falls
green. Slithering into grass
as Toad;
Viper;
Frog.
They mean something
as they writhe over
my cold bare feet.
All in all excellent poem .... liked it!
Ed Crane
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