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weather poem part 1: the wolf journal (Free verse) by nypoet22
This is a beginning. And in the beginning, we begin to end, even as an ending begins again. When this chapter stands complete, another will begin. _weather poem part 1: the wolf journal_ Everyone mentions the weather. Even before we ask of life and death we engage in talk of clouds and storms tracing the coastline with their fingernails. Even here in Florida, where freezing is what we who come from the North ignore, we mention the chilled rain. Even when cancers nip at body parts and art surrounds, paintings paper the walls and we talk about the weather. Wolves cry out against their capture and subjugation, yet all we see is the moon. Lovers of a season share their last bite of salmon and sip of semillon white, and comment on the night breeze. Chills run you through, thinking of those desperate nights, when you can still admit you'd give anything to have that feeling back, for that stiff breeze and chill air and oblong moon to dance by. Could it really be that easy to lock a heart away, capture her, ransom her as long as the day. But there is more sex in her than i can give, and not enough give in me to let her sex free. For all my youth I grew in a house where the old world was freshly conquered, her revenge as much mired in infancy as i was, her words carefully chosen in the bathroom mirror. I can just barely touch the memory of a grey-only television, a schoolbus where the only wiring lay in the engine, a day deconstructed from the hairs on Mr. Brunson's head and the bench seats of his taxi, distant, watched. It hurts to check my teeth for coffee stains, my day for breaks, my files for stamps. It is from this moment that the wolf in me still calls, remembers the moon in his eyes blue and burning. woman holds man, earth holds sky, you and i embrace. The wolf's revenous grey eyes bare themselves for long winter. They see cubs to guard, mates to win, prey to capture. The innocent stare will tear flesh from bone, the cropped hair of a soldier at attention, nose soft and black and human. Lips untightened, he wonders, "who, me?" and you see, you will never know him.

Up the ladder: The Resilient Woman
Down the ladder: Beneath The Undertow

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Arithmetic Mean: 6.0
Weighted score: 5.119203
Overall Rank: 5792
Posted: October 12, 2006 5:25 PM PDT; Last modified: October 12, 2006 9:33 PM PDT
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Comments:
[8] Dovina @ 70.38.78.229 | 12-Oct-06/7:58 PM | Reply
The 3-line verse,(verse 4?) would make a stronger beginning, preceending the beginning/end philosophy, I think. Then in the middle it gets a bit wordy, but comes back near the end to the wolf and a surprise ending.
[n/a] nypoet22 @ 72.144.83.149 > Dovina | 12-Oct-06/8:47 PM | Reply
the first stanza is really a prologue, its own poem apart from the rest. i just didn't feel like waiting another three days to post it. about the wordy part, could you pinpoint where you lost interest?
[8] Dovina @ 12.72.35.74 > nypoet22 | 13-Oct-06/3:37 PM | Reply
Having several poems going on in your head concurrently is something I relate to. Unlike some of the posters here, you and I put up our current fantasies, not even waiting for the present drunk to turn to sobriety, it seems. I understand your scheming in wanting to post two in one throw. But I must assert that even I have not gone that far. If the first part of this is really another poem, then propriety demands removing it for later dispatch, and slapping your right hand with your left for conjuring such a scheme. At least that’s my take on it.

As for wordiness in the midsection, the verses beginning “even before” And “even when” seem parenthetic – can these be yet another encased poem? It really starts with “wolves cry out”, doesn’t it? And how is subjugation much different from capture?

“you can still admit you'd give anything to have that feeling back” is really “you liked the feeling” isn’t it? And “For all my youth I grew in a house where the old world was freshly conquered” is “in youth, the old world was conquered.” Stuff like that.

Overall I like it.
[n/a] nypoet22 @ 65.9.180.121 > Dovina | 13-Oct-06/8:38 PM | Reply
here i'm guilty of planting my tongue in my cheek a bit too firmly, thought the waiting three days crack would be funny. judging by the level of humor, maybe i WAS drunk at the time. that said, i'd argue the seperate poem issue not quite as simple as that anyway. is the prologue to a chapter really its own chapter? is it really part of the chapter that follows? probably neither. part 4 has a prologue too, which is really its own thing, but not enough so to warrant waiting to give it its own entry. nonetheless, it's a different part. many poets preface different poems within a poem by using roman numerals to indicate that they're distinct and seperate from the other parts. in truth, though the prologue isn't really part of the main poem, i felt giving it its own entry would cause just as much confusion as not. part of my problem here is there's no flexibility of typesetting in this website. the prologue should be in italics before part 1's title, and wouldn't really belong anyplace else.

capture is actually catching the animal, subjugation is getting it to sit, roll over and play dead. good point about the "even when" parts. thanks for the comments.
[8] Ranger @ 62.252.32.15 | 13-Oct-06/3:53 AM | Reply
Yes, nice. I like the opening stanza, although I think Dovina might have a point about getting a bit prosaic from 'Chills run you through...' to 'bathroom mirror'. After all, you start with the trademark 'Everyone mentions the weather', which has a really smooth beat to it - ONE-two-three ONE-two-three ONE-two (with the final 'two' being slightly more emphasised than the previous twos), so to lose/abandon that musical quality seems a shame, especially in a longer piece like this. Not that you have to stick to that rhythm for the entire piece, of course, but you know what I mean. No complaints with the content; I was intrigued to see 'a day deconstructed' (nice line, by the way) as I'm currently destroying my soul trying to write a poem inspired by/for Derrida.

However...given the first stanza (and the title of 'wolf journal'...and the fact I'm something of a Tolkien freak) I kind of hoped this would have a little more fantastical imagery. Maybe an alternative version could run that way?
[n/a] nypoet22 @ 65.9.180.121 > Ranger | 13-Oct-06/8:50 PM | Reply
thanks. i'm in the process of editing this, but it's a slow slog.
[8] Ranger @ 62.252.32.15 > nypoet22 | 14-Oct-06/5:36 AM | Reply
It'll be worth it.
[8] pete @ 62.56.86.85 | 21-Oct-06/7:02 AM | Reply
well; got blown away by this; took it slow and let it speak to me , then saw all this sour-face bitchin and wondered what that was all about. in some of us poetry is a continuum and it being broken up in chunks merely a convention ( sez he pompously)... anyhow, 8 for now and will return to it later
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