Note: You can change font size, font face, and turn on dark mode by clicking the "A" icon tab in the Story Info Box.
You can temporarily switch back to a Classic Literotica® experience during our ongoing public Beta testing. Please consider leaving feedback on issues you experience or suggest improvements.
Click hereI walked down the hill today
long before eyes opened
sat under cedars
beside limestone blocks of grey
spring house walls, roof long gone
where water still runs sweet
through ruins of roofs retreat
I walked down the hill 'fore dawn
to a deep basin filled with silt
knowing I could clear it all
if I just had the balls to crawl
inside those claustrophobic walls
knee deep in mud and scoop
but the press of stone found there
raised hackles in my hair
woke me up, chilled, feverish
craving a tall glass
of fluorinated city water
I remember I interpreted this poem as going to a place in memories and finding it sweet, and then going there in person to find it decayed. Reading it again, now, I can't help but feel that I'm missing something...
starting the poem with downward decent, adding "long before eyes opened" puts in a dream like quality
I walked down the hill today
long before eyes opened
sat under cedars, gives a sense of scale to the trees, without being descriptive of them in general, for some reason I have taken note of colours a lot in poems of late, "limestone blocks of grey" give it a kind of off kilter pitch,
"spring house walls", and "water runs sweet, indicate to me that this is a happy kind of dream, in the first stanza. there is so much happening in this sonically long "Oo" in roof, through, roof's, ru-ins, "Ee" cedars, beside, sweet, retreat, the words just resonate with each other adding a musicality that is subtle but adds depth.
sat under cedars
beside limestone blocks of grey
spring house walls, roof long gone
where water still runs sweet
through ruins of roofs retreat
Looks like we have looped back to the start , the change to 'fore dawn' adds an element of foreboding that this time things aren't as sweet as they seemed, the switch to archaic is a second line of off kilter word choice but for me highlights a change.
deep basin filled with silt, for me shows the "sweet water" is gone,
the link of balls, for a man generally is a direct link to his masculinity, like an internal challenge, so if the N could just clear it then sweet water is going to flow again
balls, crawl
claustrophobic walls, harsh a sounds that hammer a point home, the word claustrophobic brings to mind compression, like the walls are going to crush the N
which is re-hashed with "press of stone found there" the rhyme scheme with raised hackles in my hair nearly does that to me sitting in my chair, as if those walls might just crush me.
I walked down the hill 'fore dawn
to a deep basin filled with silt
knowing I could clear it all
if I just had the balls to crawl
inside those claustrophobic walls
knee deep in mud and scoop
but the press of stone found there
raised hackles in my hair
final lines address that it was actually a dream, but not a good one, cold sweats, from all that stone, crushing, compressing, final line says it all, even if it is a mis-spell (butters) no one likes fluoridated city water, but if it keeps us away from those god damn blocks of death then I'll drink to that
woke me up, chilled, feverish
craving a tall glass
of fluorinated city water
I want to write like this. Words that take on a life of there own and flow seamlessly off the page. Great job, HH.
Great alliteration. The description in this poem gives some real feel to it.Very nice.
this spilled from you in a live write - i think you need to change your sigline, harry.
this leads the reader down and into an alternate state of mood, one that infiltrates the mind and lingers in the flesh well beyond the last words of the poem. that takes skills, and this showcases those you are developing. more than that, though, this comes to life through your artistic eye.
yeah, you need an apostrophe in roofs (roof's) and the fluoride rather than fluorine, though i've less of a quibble over 'fore/before: maybe it should jar me more than it does, and wonder if pre-dawn would work, keeping the same stress-pattern as 'today/fore dawn' as well as adding to the 'ee' link, first to second verse. but really, i like it as it is - its atmospheric pressure made me blind to 'fluorinated' and any issues with 'fore.
I walked down the hill today
long before eyes opened
sat under cedars
beside limestone blocks of grey
spring house walls, roof long gone
where water still runs sweet
through ruins of roofs retreat
I walked down the hill 'fore dawn
to a deep basin filled with silt
knowing I could clear it all
if I just had the balls to crawl
inside those claustrophobic walls
knee deep in mud and scoop
but the press of stone found there
raised hackles in my hair
woke me up, chilled, feverish
craving a tall glass
of fluoridated city water
...from me too, loved the internal rhyming as well and the sombre mood of the thing. Kudos, HH.
Funny things, the first line of each stanza have the same number of syllables; before was used well, before. *laughs* Then say them each in the line and pick the one that works best for what ever reason..
Thanks for the comments. I'd say something self depreciating but I'd catch hell for it.
Ang said i.e. 'fore, rhyme
if I just had the balls to crawl
inside those claustrophobic walls
superb!
Now consider the end, this is a journey from darkness to light, a decent into hell, and I've never seen it expressed that way.
This is a well thought out poem. High Five!
One of the reasons I hang around this dump is to see things like this.
the way you used rhyme and repetition make the poem really musical and because you do it sporadically it also keeps it from sounding too carefully constructed. The seams of your poem are well hidden and that's a very good thing.
I also love the second line because it makes me as a reader wonder whether this really happened or is a dream.
Just a few nitpicks and only my opinion of course, but 'fore (instead of before) gives an off archaic note to me, as if it's trying to sound poetic. Also I'm wondering if "roofs" needs a apostrophe--I can't tell whether it means one or more roofs.
Wonderful writing. Easy 5.