Last year I really began to get into poetry, and I've written quite a number since then. I got inspired to write ever since I studied Walt Whitman for Literature in school, and now I've written my own works that are of course inspired by his deep, complex and meaningful pieces.
They use a lot of different styles, and some even employ multiple styles. But regardless of style each one tells a particular story, so I thought I'd make a person thread for me to post them. I'll discuss what they talk about and/or what they mean in a spoiler as well, if you're interested to know more. Let me know what you think!
I'll post them occasionally in no particular order, so enjoy.
Archangel
Blackened by their sharpened scythes,
Did the Archangels sit.
Torn a hole through space and time,
Forever did they meet.
To Counsel nigh where no man tread,
For the world they sought.
Left alone on the brink of death,
Was the fate of man they wrought.
Worlds apart but Order in all,
Together in harmony, never in sole.
They worshipped the brave but fought for the cowardly,
Never to be their own.
Trapped in their realm of diluted Torment,
From the eyes they sought.
Singled out in times of distress,
Their story thus told forevermore.
Peril sat and watched the transgression,
Wept through tears of endless joy.
They spoke in tongues that foreshadowed the days,
And the darkness for which they bought.
Yet not all was lost through the broken abyss,
Such for man and Angel lastly learnt to live apart.
As they were blackened by their sharpened scythes,
The Archangels, did they lie.
LONG explanation ( ;p) :
Spoiler:
--BACKSTORY--
The poem is of course Fiction, and is set in a world visually similar to that of Sanctuary from the game Diablo, but is not integrally similar character/story-wise, etc.
It talks about the relationship between mortals and angels, who have had frequent dealings with each other from time to time under relevant circumstances. The angels consider themselves the rulers of the "Overworld" (both the mortal and angelic world) and believe that the mortal world should have a religion dedicated to them in exchange for not only angelic boons (crop-growth, rain, wealth, etc.), but also for peace. The mortals do not know, however, that their worship gives the angels their power to gift such treasures, and so if man stops worshipping them then they'll obviously lose their power, which will result in the mortals losing their angelic boons. As a result the angels will go to war with the mortals until they agree to continue worshipping them, giving them back their power to which they can use as they please.
However, the mortals are starting to question the morality of the angels and their interactions with the mortal world, and the angels in turn are starting to find the mortals untrustworthy, and are discussing what should be done. Some mortals are even practicing dark rituals to enter the angelic realm for their own benefits, though they are unknown.
All the 'lesser' angels are governed by a council of "Archangels", otherwise known as 'high' angels that were mysteriously purely immortal, whilst the other angels had limited immortality. Each Archangel is meant to represent and specialize in a certain element of life. For example, there are four (but not limited to) Archangels mentioned in the poem. The Archangel of Counsel, the Archangel of Order, the Archangel of Torment, and the Archangel of Peril. Based on their names you can easily guess which roles they play. I should also note that their names can use several meanings if they are available, such as the Archangel of Counsel.
--USE IN THE POEM--
The first passage basically introduces the Archangels into the story. The 'Scythes' they use are artifacts to hold power/influence over all the other angels/mortals, so as to ascertain their general power/importance over everyone lesser than them in an attempt to gain control. The Scythes are so big that they can blacken the sky by blocking the sun, which is only used in serious circumstances.
The Archangels also have limited power over space and time, so they can use it to bend the energies around them and use it to their own desire, with the occasional side effect that it will create a rift, or in this case, a 'hole' that can cause some negative shifts in the world's energy. This is what causes the mortals to start distrusting the angels.
The passage about Counsel talks about the meetings that he holds to discuss the dealings of these mortals. The Council believes that man is trying to enter the angelic realm in an attempt to escape the corrupt world that they have created (what with wars, corrupt leaders, lack of resources, etc.). As a result man sits on the brink of their own ultimate death if they cannot contain the corruption they have caused, and so Counsel advises that the fate of these mortals be discussed, and whether the angels should help in their own way to end the suffering that man has wrought upon itself.
The passage about Order is his response to Counsel's advice, and that harmony has always been achieved between the two worlds because they mostly keep to themselves whilst accomplishing their agreed "trade" (worship for reward). Changing that system now would result in an negative balance, as both worlds should let things run their own course without interference. As a result the mortals are on their own in this matter, regardless of whomever leader they serve that sits behind closed doors whilst they're out doing their bidding in wars and the like, thus never to be independent.
The passage about Torment talks about the constant gaze that he keeps on the mortal world, feeding off of their torment to control those aforementioned energies. Whilst this may be seen as a negative thing, he also looks for certain people with unique stories regarding their engagement with the corruption, and singles them out to other angels so that their story may be recorded and told for future reference.
The passage about Peril is similar to that of Torment, in which he gazes over the mortal world and feeds off those in peril. However, whilst he finds solace (and entertainment) in watching people in peril, he also uses that powerful energy to bend time to his favor, and can catch glimpses of the future that he foreshadows to the other angels, and even to man in some circumstances.
However, in this particular circumstance the future he foresees is a dark foreboding future, but he does not know to whom it applies. Nevertheless, it will dramatically affect both man and angel, and will thus have everlasting effects for centuries to come.
In the final passage, Peril's foresight comes true and is applied to the angels. Man had finally figured out a way to get into the angelic realm, and having decided that the angels (whom were basically their masters/ultimate rulers) were responsible for all the bad that happened in the mortal realm (since they weren't technically independent, as they had to worship the angels), they decided that their enemy was not themselves but the angels, and the only way for them to live apart was to rid one of the other. During the battle for the angelic realm, one of the Archangel's Scythes got lost in the moment, and in an unexplainable way, somehow managed to blacken the sky in the angelic realm, thus ending the battle in favor of the mortals. The angels agreed to no longer serve the Archangels, whom had all been defeated (as it had never happened before, the lack of light in the angelic realm gave the Archangels immortality. With no more light, however, they became mortal and were defeatable). They thus decided to shed their wings and join the mortal world, and would seek forgiveness for their actions. And thus man no longer served any angel, as the Archangel's bodies seemed to litter the angelic realm.
Having written that, I personally think that's a pretty epic story in itself hahaha. But there's the explanation. Long, yes, but considering it's Fiction I thought it was necessary.
Back in high school, we used to back poetry up with a popular tune that suits it to make it more lively and so that the students could memorize it better. Then we would sing it like a play on stage, reminds me of Emily Dickinson's, There is no Frigate Like a Book.
There is no Frigate like a Book (1286)
BY EMILY DICKINSON
There is no Frigate like a Book
To take us Lands away
Nor any Coursers like a Page
Of prancing Poetry –
This Traverse may the poorest take
Without oppress of Toll –
How frugal is the Chariot
That bears the Human Soul –
This was the tune I remembered that was put on this poem:
Hmm that's an interesting way of looking at it. I'd never often thought about poetry that way (except for when I write song lyrics, of course... that of which I'm not extremely good at, ironically, seeing as I still write poetry...).
That's an interesting perspective though. I wonder if it can be applied to any of my works quite easily.
On that note, here's another poem of mine. Enjoy :3
Fields of Time
Darkened skies abode in the Fields of Time,
Harvested like an apple of an everyday chain,
I, too, saw in these fields,
A portion of my future, or past, wherever it may lie,
Either one was lost in an echo,
Drifting aimlessly like a broken dream.
Sullen hearts and blonde-haired maidens,
Like a yellow boat on a sky-torn sea,
Broken away ever were the waves of permission,
Permission to seek, to see, to be seen,
Underlying one's true motives,
Wallowing like a hapless hatchling a long way from home.
Then, a word with two different meanings,
Like black and white, so coarse but so frail,
Only one and only one other,
A sentimental sentinel,
Faceless outside, but inside remarkable,
If only to see remnants, to thus be blind.
Resurrected from an empty grave,
A blackhearted soul to administer,
Pain and longing, a feeling of displacement,
Drunken lies, rambled in the eves or wry,
I only saw death,
Darkened skies abode in the Fields of Time.
Explanation:
Spoiler:
This poem explores an alternate concept of our reality. Instead of 'Heaven' or 'reincarnation', there's a 'ghost' dimension called the Fields of Time (by 'ghost' I mean you cannot enter that dimension unless you, of course, die). In these fields are literally millions upon millions of fragments of time, and each one represents a different life, whether it's that of a human or animal. If you gaze into these fragments you can foresee what will unfold during this lifetime, but these images won't be crystal clear (hence why they are 'fragments') and so the life you are viewing is ultimately unpredictable. The only way to see these lives in full is to of course enter your chosen fragment as they also act as a portal, but upon doing so your memory is wiped of the Fields of Time so that your chosen new life can begin naturally, from birth to death. The fragment is also closed, so as to not create duplicate realities if another soul chooses the same fragment.
So in a way you could consider it a form of reincarnation, except of course you'd be able to choose the next life you have. Also keep in mind that 'you' are no more than a floating soul, drifting about these fields looking for a fragment to choose from.
--USE IN THE POEM--
The poem basically explores just that, all the way through. Each line or two represents a different fragment of time, and shows just how diverse and unclear they are from an external viewing.
The first passage introduces the Fields of Time from a first-person perspective, so you can see the story of a lost soul wandering the fields looking for an ideal life to live in. Most of the poem is of course referencing the different fragments, but this soul does also describe some other aspects of it (dark skies, fragments being harvested by other souls like apples, etc.)
In the third passage for example, the soul mentions a Sentinel. I've written a separate poem about this Sentinel, sort of like a prequel/sequel, but the soul describes him as being "sentimental". This is because the Sentinel, as you can guess, is the guardian of the Fields of Time, and keeps a constant watch over it. He also mans the gates to these fields, and chooses whether or not some souls are 'worthy' of entering. As a result, you can imagine that that job would get a bit lonely over time. He lets all these souls into these fields and watches them choose their desired fragments, yet he himself cannot enter one and live his own unique life. However he could theoretically enter one of the fragments, but upon doing so the Fields of Time would become abundant as they would be unmanned, and the souls outside the gates awaiting entry would never be let in as there is no one there to let them in. The result would be the extinction of mobile life in the worlds these fragments led to, because there'd be no souls to replenish them.
The "Faceless outside, but inside remarkable" phrase references most of that, as to anyone who views the Sentinel would just think he's an emotionless 'slave' tasked with the overwatch of the Fields of Time, yet inside his emotions are swimming with life, but he cannot show them lest he break his oath.
Ultimately it's a dark way of looking at it, as all of these souls are effectively 'recycled' in order to replenish the life in these worlds.
So it is an alternate version of reincarnation.
Based on the fragments that this mentioned soul looks at, you can guess what the rest of the poem is saying.
I do try haha but apparently a lot of my work is appraised by those I read it to, so I keep writing out of passion. A lot of my poems that I've written so far I just sort of put my feelings onto paper, and word them in a poetic way. That being said not all of them have explanations, so they can be quite open to interpretation.
Other poems of mine however do have a certain topic whether it be fiction/non-fiction so of course they would have an explanation there, but even still sometimes they might not.
Here's another one I'm digging out of the archives, and by archives I mean this is a piece I wrote for Literature two years ago, so I've already archived all my secondary school work haha. This is when I slowly started to get an interest in poetry, especially after it was the one thing I seemed to excel in in Literature.
I was tasked to write a poem about WW1 that is based off of other soldiers' poems that we had studied, so it had to be in the style of a soldier who'd written a poem about WW1 (or something along those lines... if you get what I mean haha. I can't remember the specific guidelines. In simple it was about WW1).
Raise The Flag
The wasteland lies bare, churned,
Eaten up through shells, gas,
As the ground and bodies burned.
Here I sat, face to face with my past.
Bullets rang and canisters threw,
Bombs and blood, all scattered.
Dust and debris, always anew,
Other than us ourselves, massacred.
Firing to the last man; the last bullet,
Even wounded men; tossing grenades and firing blank shots,
From the pistols in their belt,
Lasting til’ they bled out amidst the reddened moss.
Rain fire, boys! The bleak excerpt from the charge,
But enough to keep us alive,
Enough, even for our scarred hearts,
For our minds were not alike.
The battle, merely won,
The enemy in fall,
But us as well, fell by the ton.
Not just bodies, but minds as well.
Raise the flag; Upon a new victory, this day.
Raise the flag; The sun rises, a new dawn.
Raise the flag; The last shot, from a stray,
And the light I see clearly, as my life is drawn.
Rang in the night,
Thus did I hear you call,
To surround myself with force,
Left me out of control,
'Ere in this path hath thou driven me,
To the lies of deceit unto my last breath,
Never did thou leave me sole,
As you wanted it, I couldn't have,
Watched me run dry, e'er more luscious to you,
The suffering you led, too manipulative for I,
Followed as I did I dared no question,
Thy mind alike thought it best for me,
Yet darkness only is what pursued me,
Gratitude and emotion did I never render,
Why should I thank you,
Hark against this night of yours,
Ne'er did I see your light,
Thou only bred darkness for thy denizens within,
Thought you did that I too was one of them,
Forgotten only did you remember who I actually was,
My life is sole, I shalt ne'er do thy desires,
Thy evil deeds, thy menace,
Thou lead me astray, only to ruin,
Ruin my own life, corrupt its dreams,
E're more could I look you in the eye,
For I knew what it is thou wanted,
Darkness only crept from those shadows,
Ne'er would I submit to you.
Basically the poem speaks about independence, and that life, particularly the lives of today's youth, is being 'over-controlled' by most parents/family. Of course, that's just my opinion written into figurative literature.
The narrator speaks about various experiences with his family in which they've attempted to "get him" to do things that he has otherwise not planned on doing in his life. He is mature enough to make his own decisions yet those older than him "know what's best" for him and want to do everything they can to help him achieve his dreams, yet to him they're only getting in the way. He's doing what they want, not what he wants, and thus he is tired of having others "control" his life. He knows exactly what he wants and how he will get it, but with constant interference/little independence he cannot easily achieve those dreams.
As a result he will not submit to their own desires/plans for him. Whether privately or publicly, he will dismiss whatever it is that they want of him, as it's his life and they shouldn't have the right to control it.
More poetry for the meddling mind! And this stuff's a little different..
I've based these following poems on songs with the same name, so their explanations will be pretty obvious based on the song's lyrics and/or general mood. I'll put a link to each song under each poem (so as to save spamming the thread with chunky embedded videos). Enjoy! :3 xx
Some Kind of Magic
Gazing longingly into your eyes,
I could tell you why,
I saw more than just the soul in front of me.
It was a spark behind that mind of yours,
And the fire inside mine that made it set off so.
You played the heart,
I played the ace,
Together we were a full house,
That'd fallen deep inside.
We couldn't shake this even if we tried,
No stopping the life we were to share.
It was like some kind of magic,
Had stepped into my heart,
And held out its hand,
To reach yours.
A Race Against Time
The struggle it faded,
As the light I shaded,
I drove all night,
In a race against time.
Darkness left behind me,
Yet I knew it followed free,
Cruising in the night,
In its race against time.
Speed had changed its game,
For I gave it a new flame,
And the crows it vastly shined,
In their race against time.
The car itself was a strobe light,
Amidst the blurs around my flight,
The illusion it made kept me fine,
Rolling in my race against time.
P.S; does anyone recognize the little melodic idea repeated in the intro at 0:17 - 0:32? I swear I've heard it somewhere before...
All Alone
Whilst you dragged and drank behind those lies,
Ignoring me with those rocks you smoked,
I could barely see you through the mist,
I'd almost forgotten what you looked like,
Were it not for the door from which you sat idly by,
I'd never have moved on to be better off all alone.
04-19-2016, 08:36 PM (Edited 04-19-2016, 08:42 PM by meridannight.)
i love poetry. i think it's good that you write it and post it here.
i admit i haven't properly read these yet. i have to be in the right type of mood to read poetry, i can't do it just any time. but i have my eye on this thread and i intend to read this at the right moment.
PS. Walt Whitman is one of the worst ''poets'' ever in existence. his work is so tedious and such a long-winded nonsense, that i can't get through a page of it without becoming frustrated. i have read his Leaves of Grass, and it took a tremendous effort on my part just to finish the mere 180 pages. it felt like my neurons were fried after i'd finished it. that is not what poetry feels like.
my poetic sensibilities were built up on Baudelaire, Lorca, Rimbaud, Verlaine, and Musset, to name a few. Whitman is proletarian compared to them.