Tragic Rabbit Posted January 8, 2006 Report Share Posted January 8, 2006 Sunshine by Starlight In your dreams, you see her Walking ?neath the boughs Moonlight on her shoulders Stars amid her clothes She?s darkness in sunlight Her beauty is grim She?ll kiss you or kill you Select it at whim In landscapes of wishes On hilltops of lies She holds court as fearful As demons devise Yet fairies and angels They flock to her side For sunshine?s more magnet Than dark in its pride Does she live in shadows Do bluebirds have wings Yet knowing and fleeing Are two different things For she is the sunshine With sha-dow-y eyes She?s also the hunter And you are the prize In dreams, she is calling You cannot refuse You put off the moment But one day must choose You run but it?s useless You hide but she?ll know No shadow to cling to Where sunshine can?t go For sunshine by starlight Is not kept at bay When finally she finds you You?ll vanish away ?Neath treetops by moonbeams You?ll give up your soul For sunshine eats shadows And swallows men whole By moonlight does sunshine Break them with stones She eats souls by starshine Then picks at men?s bones Your heart is a dainty Your flesh is her feast But even in dying You won?t be released When others will glimpse her In dim moonlit dreams That strange midnight music Will be your own screams Cold sunshine by starlight Is not what she seems Her brightness in shadow How tempting it gleams In landscapes of wishes From high silver thrones She laughs at your heartaches And plays with your bones * Quote Link to comment
Tragic Rabbit Posted January 8, 2006 Author Report Share Posted January 8, 2006 I actually know a 'Sunshine' for whom this was sort of written, but it was more, as I just told her, of an archetypal female: mother, lover, slayer. The fearsome female of one's dreams. How did the poem seem to readers? It's so hard to get poetry feedback... TR Quote Link to comment
Tragic Rabbit Posted January 26, 2006 Author Report Share Posted January 26, 2006 How did the poem seem to readers? It's so hard to get poetry feedback...TR Harder than I thought that day, obviously. Fishing? Yeah, yeah... Kissy-poo, TR Quote Link to comment
Graeme Posted January 26, 2006 Report Share Posted January 26, 2006 I'm atrocious at poetry feedback but I'll give it a go. I liked the imagery of sunshine at night -- that bright person who seems so brilliant when those around them seem dark. The fact that the brightness can conceal a dark side is also painfully true. Overall, I thought it was very good. Graeme PS: That's my quota of poetry feedback for this century used up. Anything after this point is a bonus. Quote Link to comment
Tragic Rabbit Posted January 27, 2006 Author Report Share Posted January 27, 2006 I liked the imagery of sunshine at night -- that bright person who seems so brilliant when those around them seem dark. The fact that the brightness can conceal a dark side is also painfully true.. She's bipolar, I was attempting to hit on that, the combinations of impressions that creates (bipolar people can be 'fun', seem compelling company at times, at others can seem frightening or dangerous), as well as touching on the sort of deadly female archetype. Thanks for commenting, Graeme. TR Quote Link to comment
blue Posted January 27, 2006 Report Share Posted January 27, 2006 My connection must've eaten my reply to this (i.e. it timed out or reset) back when you first posted this. I have no idea what I said then. This, to tell you I wasn't ignoring you. ----- It sounds like she's unequal parts ice and fire, depending on what happens. The sun, moon, and stars imagery was... I started to say "illuminating." (Groans, sorry.) It was effective and pretty. Then there's the huntswoman imagery, the feral nature, femme fatale. Hmm, I like the poem as is. I suppose if you really wanted to rework it, you could play with the fiery, hot and cold nature of the sun and moon, and connect that with a hunting female at day and night, bathed in the midday sun or midnight moon. But that'd be at least one or more poems completely different from this one, and I don't think this one needs anything else in editing, really. I'm just thinking out loud. (See the first sentence of this paragraph again, for my opinion of this poem.) Personally, I like women friends / relatives who are a little less biting. Perhaps the rabbit has stronger stuff beneath that warm fuzzy exterior. (I'm sure of that.) A rabbit-at-arms, at need, perhaps. (The preceding sentence of odd philosophy brought to you by my brain, wandering its own strange path.) Quote Link to comment
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