When He Died

Discussion in 'Poetry' started by Vetty214, Sep 26, 2007.

  1. Vetty214

    Vetty214 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    When He Died

    An Oak tree sprung, before dusk
    ramming its way in one mighty heave
    through living room floor
    pressing upper branches
    greenery, limbs
    flat to the ceiling,
    and for a trifling second,
    I wondered
    would it break an opening
    for something to come through.

    I climbed the rubble
    at its great base
    a mountainous pyre,
    of dirt, broken wood slats;
    and with meager arms rounded wide,
    I gauged its circumference,
    face close,
    bark scratching at cheek, at ear,
    and I lingered…

    for floating nearby
    his fading voice
    the bold scent of his life,
    and resonating deep in that trunk,
    his laughter
    and as I listened,
    the fault line trembled
    around my edges
    but the Oak’s leaves
    didn’t rustle, didn’t stir.

    *as requested, I've reposted this poem. Thanks for the suggestion Aidan. I'll reply to your question on the other post soon via pm.
     
  2. redyelruc

    redyelruc The Yard Man

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    I think this is great. The oak gives an image of somebody typically male, powerful, somewhat reserved and unmovable.
    I think that maybe the last couple of lines refer to this. That maybe you were being moved to tears, in your memory, and that as always, he was unmovable, unable to console you or even react to your grief. I'm not sure. But the oak, for me brings to mind, old world furniture, old world values. That sort of dusty austerity in the libraries of the wealthy.

    Anyway, I think this poem is wonderfully well written and leaves a lot of room for the reader to extract many ideas and thoughts.

    Peace,
    A.
     
  3. Vetty214

    Vetty214 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    I went around and around on this poem and one morning I woke up and said to myself... just personalize it. So it became, "When He Died"...

    the Oak

    that unmovable Oak that sprung through the floor

    in my head when I wrote this - the Oak was the representation of 'Grief' - but not simple grief... one that is massive, that your arms look meager against...

    So yes, grief at it's most powerful is masculine, reserved, unmovable... I like dusty austerity because this enormous grief is all that... and what could be older then grief... and what could impact wealthy or poor equally powerful...

    so you did sense all that it was meant to represent... the leaves didn't rustle, didn't stir... because yes, when your fault line - the break down in tears that you saw here.... the emotion pouring.... didn't even move the unmovable... the grief unchanged... not even the leaves of the Oak moved. Thanks for taking the time you did with this Aidan.

    :sunny:
     
  4. redyelruc

    redyelruc The Yard Man

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    Thanks for this. It's like having an online poetry lesson. The bit about the rubble and destruction that the oak brought makes more sense now. I previously had a little problem linking the first half of the poem with the second.

    I'm really happy that you dissect your work like this for my(everybody's) benefit. You are giving me a better understanding of poetry and are helping me improve my own.

    Peace,
    A.
     
  5. KittenX

    KittenX Purrrific

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    I loved all of this, the message, the delivery, the word choice. Thanks for sharing. :)
     
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