All Comments on 'Age of Discovery'

by AnonAndAnon

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lorencinolorencinoabout 16 years ago
Explorers of the mind

An interesting device, if I'm understanding this correctly of using history as a metaphor for life. The hopes of Balboa and the conquistadores imagined as discovering pristine new worlds to conquer in a personal life, but the new worlds exist no more and there is nothing left in the aftermath of the age of discovery. "Been there, done that," produces a sense of hopelessness. <br> <br>

On the other hand, perhaps the illusion is the historical romanticism that igores the fact that more than 100 million indigenous people died at the hands of the conqistadores and the diseases they brought. Perhaps the "clean stream" is the illusion as it flows red with the blood spilt in the name of mindless greed. The dog places no arbitrary value on yellow metal and so is unimpressed not subject to all the illusions derived from the human imagination.<br><br>

This poem is like a mysterious mountain range hiding a world of meaning I'm still unearthing, or is it facilitating my delusions. Either way, I'm having a great time with it.

LeBrozLeBrozabout 16 years ago
██

Fine display of creativity through a vivid imagination. I do wonder, though, about lines 4 & 6. It seems as though one of them ought to have been lined out, since they each seem to say the exact same thing.

KOLKOREKOLKOREabout 16 years ago
There will always be tomorrow for fantasy

Lorencino, I believe this is a fantasy (probably in the morning) of a man and his dog as they stroll the near by area. Everything could be imagined grand dangerous and un explored -that is until the forward forces that is the exploring dog decides to return home... I was charmed.

UnderYourSpellUnderYourSpellabout 16 years ago
~

I saw it as an imagined land to go with the clouds that looked like mountains on the horizon and what could be there if they were real. I agree with Leon two of the lines are practically the same

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