Reviews from

Life, Love, and Other Disasters

Viewing comments for Chapter 14 "Come, Woodsman"
A collection of poems on these themes

95 total reviews 
Comment from adewpearl
Excellent
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strong alternate-line rhyming in your quatrains followed by a solid rhyming couplet
Excellent cadence due to consistent
iambic meter
good alliteration in fear of future fall
lovely descriptive detail
Effective turn in line and a truly powerful
closing couplet
one little nit - seasons of the year are not customarily capitalized :-) Brooke


 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 08-Jul-2012
    Thanks, Brooke
    Sonnets are not really my cup of tea - they make you work too hard, but I was happy with this one. Got the tree metaphor done in a sitting and woke up the net morning with the final couplet in my head.
    Steve
Comment from Hitcher
Excellent
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Well I'm glad it's not my time, I'm still fighting the passage of the years, hanging in there, undaunted and unfazed by Autumn's tears, Yea I know! Time is going to kick my ass sooner or later... Cool poem!

 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 08-Jul-2012
    Thank you for the kind words - glad you enjoyed.
    Steve
Comment from robina1978
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I thought this was a very good one: an English one. Two stanza's and then a twist. Strong rhyming Couplets at the end. I thought it was a good subject to pick. Best wishes for the contest.

 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thanks - they only ever seem to deal with English sonnets here, although I did post an Italian one a while back. Might be an idea to have a contest for that type...
    Steve
reply by robina1978 on 07-Jul-2012
    very good idea Steve, as long as you hold it cheap. Have a nice weekend, Ine
Comment from Taurean Monkey
Excellent
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This is a beautiful poem, the ending of which is so sad, yet resigned to the fact that the tree no longer has purpose.

Poor hollowed trunk where once you stood sublime;
"Come, Woodsman, swing your axe. It's time. It's time"

The reiteration of 'it's time' can either be read as a call for urgent action (get it over and done with now) or a sad lament, accepting the time has now come 'it's time, it's time'. I like the chronology of the tree's life mapped out within the lines of your poem. Please accept a virtual six.

 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thanks for the great review and the virtual six. I'm thinking I've been too subtle here - should I put a big sign on it saying this is not really about a tree, it's about a person.
    You are the only reviewer so far to even comment about the ending which I was kinda proud of...
    Steve
reply by Taurean Monkey on 06-Jul-2012
    Hmm, just read it again, Steve. Image of a tree, tree metaphor throughout your sonnet equals literal interpretation (me thinks). If you want to give the reader the possibility of a different interpretation, maybe you could either add something in the author notes, or change the image. That way, in the reader's mind we should be thinking 'the poem reads as though it's about a tree, but the image threw me as it's a [whatever]. Maybe it's not about a tree after all?' Then you'd have to answer lots of 'can you please provide clarification' questions :-) A big sign would spoil it, though it'd help us lol Tricia
reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Tricia, thanks for the second look - I think, because it was so clear in my mind I ignored how difficult it would be for readers to see it. I'm thinking of changing the title to 'My Father' - don't even know if I can do that or if it has to be re-submitted.
reply by Taurean Monkey on 06-Jul-2012
    Hi Steve, not sure with it being a contest entry. Why not send Tom a private message to check before you do anything to it? It might be better putting something in the author notes by way of explanation, if the rules permit it. That gives the reader a first read thinking it's about a tree, then a second, but seeing it as a metaphor for a person. Tricia
reply by the author on 07-Jul-2012
    Thanks again - I just changed the line under the title - got a different kind of review straight away...
    Steve
Comment from cvcopac
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Very emotive and quick to be identified with. That's my tree alright. Strong metaphor and imagery, meter and rhyme. Good descriptive writing and subtle volta but dramatic narrative. Best of luck in the contest.

 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thank you - even got the formatting right this time...
    Steve
Comment from artemis53
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What a great piece. You have personified a tree just as a human depicting the events in its life. What a unique and splendid write!

 Comment Written 06-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thanks - but what is the word for the opposite of personification? What I wanted to do was describe a person as if they were a tree - let's call it anti-P
    Steve
Comment from Meta~Mark
Excellent
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no woodsman..no dontr cut me down..With outspread arms you offered pleasing shade. From life's harsh blows you sheltered those o'erthrown

excellent job!

 Comment Written 05-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thank you.
    Steve
Comment from guinea
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Very good writing. The words flow smoothly and with heart. Shows deep thinking. The imagery is great. The picture goes well. Good job.

 Comment Written 05-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Thank you.
    Steve
Comment from Glasstruth
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The tree of life, what a beautiful way to look at it. Haven't seen the movie, but your poetry shows that it starts out with the roots, then as you wrote:
"But every Summer ends in Autumn's tears,
The crumpled leaf, the gnarled and twisted bark.
In vain you fought the passage of the years" Time a youthful enemy captures the best of us. Well done. Les

 Comment Written 05-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 05-Jul-2012
    Thanks, Les. You may be the first reviewer to suspect that I wasn't really writing about a damn tree!
    Steve
Comment from Earl of Oxford
Excellent
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A top sonnet from one of the site's top rhyme/meter poets, Steve.

Excellent personification of the mighty oak who's time has come.

Great metaphors too with 'green life coursing' and 'autumn's tears'(falling leabes), in particular.

I've reviewed several top sonnets for this contest today, and yours is um with them.

Best wishes, Ray

 Comment Written 05-Jul-2012


reply by the author on 05-Jul-2012
    Thank you for the kind words, but I've clearly been too subtle - this was never meant to be about a tree...
    Steve
reply by Earl of Oxford on 05-Jul-2012
    It did remind me of a penis that was now firing blanks, but I didn't like to say so in case it wasn't. From your reply, I think I may be right. :-)
reply by Earl of Oxford on 05-Jul-2012
    Hang on, it can't 'fire' at all as it can't stand, though when that happens to me, I'll refrain from calling the woodman to chopper, I mean 'chop' it off. :-) x
reply by the author on 05-Jul-2012
    :o))
    No I wasn't being that subtle!

    Just talking about an old gentleman grimly clinging to life when all around him would be better off for his gentle passing...
    Steve
reply by Earl of Oxford on 05-Jul-2012
    I KNEW I was wrong, and I now wish I'd kept my gob shut. LOL x
reply by the author on 06-Jul-2012
    Ah, but you can't be wrong if you can see that meaning in it! Gave me a whole new perspective...
    Steve
reply by Earl of Oxford on 06-Jul-2012
    That's right - so long as some interpritation is made, it proves it's been read and thought about. x