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My Prayer (Free verse) by dana071287
I cry, come closer to me, it is You I want to see. Flooding my life with your love, love that is sent from above. I am crying out to You, I want a heart that is new. Revealing to me Your way, from You I will not stray. Be reflected in my life. In me let a fire burn, and for You may my soul yearn, so You may take away my strife. To You alone will I pray for You to show me the way. My heart will You please renew, I want to follow you, too. I look to heaven above, and cry for more of Your love to share with the people I see, to say what You mean to me.

Down the ladder: This life is sheer nonsense

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Arithmetic Mean: 4.0
Weighted score: 4.880797
Overall Rank: 10258
Posted: May 11, 2006 9:41 PM PDT; Last modified: May 11, 2006 9:41 PM PDT
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Comments:
[7] Ranger @ 62.252.32.15 | 12-May-06/5:13 AM | Reply
Devotional poems are difficult to write. They're like love poems except that they won't get someone into bed with you. Therefore, if they're for public reading, they have to be superb. A good start would be making it not your prayer. If it's for public reading, the reader is going to want to be able to include theirself in the reading. Usually that means following the golden rule of poetry: 'Show, don't tell'. It also means following the second golden rule of poetry: 'Never rhyme "love/above/dove" in anything'. Seriously. You will not find a more overused rhyme in the English language, and readers want innovation, not more of the same. Using the 'love/above' rhyme twice in one poem is bordering on being a criminal offence.

General points over, now to the poem itself. Well firstly it's fairly obvious that this is something you're pretty passionate about: that is a good start. However, the content doesn't live up to this. For one thing, you use 'I' 8 times, 'me' 5 times, and 'my' 5 times in 20 lines (that's assuming I counted right; not a certainty). That isn't conducive to letting the reader give it their own 'personal' reading. Cut down on pronoun usage in poetry as much as possible, otherwise not only does it limit the reader, but it also gets repetitive.
I have to admit that I didn't work out the rhyme scheme at first (rhymes aren't my strong point) but on a second reading I saw the reversal and symmetry; that was good, although it would have been better with more variety in the middle - 'new' and 'renew' suggests you were struggling a little. Also, 'I want a heart that is new' doesn't really sound very poetic. To make it more interesting you could go along the lines of 'I seek a heart [do you really want a new heart though?] renewed' (I know you've already used 'renew', but I don't want to tell you which words to write).

Umm...I can't really think of much at the moment so I'll leave it there rather than risk getting something spectacularly wrong and making an arse of myself. Welcome to poemranker, and I hope these suggestions are useful.
[n/a] dana071287 @ 68.21.149.240 > Ranger | 12-May-06/12:27 PM | Reply
hey, thanks for the comments. I'll take a look and maybe work on some of the rhymes that I have in the poem. I'd also just like to point out that with the poem, I was also counting syllables, every line has 7, so that was a point of struggle I had in writing the poem. But thanks again for your criticism...much appreciated
[7] Ranger @ 62.252.32.15 > dana071287 | 12-May-06/12:36 PM | Reply
I wouldn't worry too much about the syllable count, to be honest. It's more important that you get the rhythm right by working out syllable stress - the easy way to figure this out is to see if a reading of your poem requires you to pronounce a word differently to normal. Also, I wasn't sure whether or not to say earlier, but don't force the words into the rhythm. 'I want a heart that is new' feels like the sentence has been strung out to fit the rhythm. The best way to get round this is to enjamb the lines.
Good luck with your writing - this site is an excellent place for learning to both read and write poetry. Actually, that's the other thing I should say - developing skills at reading poetry is vital for writing. Poemranker offers the chance to do both.
[5] Dovina @ 70.38.78.229 | 12-May-06/9:28 AM | Reply
I think God listens to this kind of gushing, but I can't imagine Him doing anything about it. Too sentimental, too little desire for real change.
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