03-30-2024, 06:49 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-30-2024, 07:21 AM by TranquillityBase.)
(03-29-2024, 09:15 PM)TranquillityBase Wrote:OK, I'm recanting. I read it aloud and that made all the difference. Just my knee jerk reaction to intensive rhyming.(03-29-2024, 04:37 AM)dukealien Wrote: Being Nemesis (FPV)This is a very interesting subject and I like what you've done, but feel like the effort to produce the rhymes gets in the way of a much more direct and more vivid rendering. Like your poem Eye of Ajax. https://www.pigpenpoetry.com/thread-23888.html
Tankists must despise and fear "Tankist" bugs me. "Crewmen"?
drone-pilots lurking, never near,
far more than their ancestral knights
had need to dread an archer’s flights
of puny arrows: sword and spear I don't think they were that puny and could pierce armor
could stoop and slay from armored gear. really like this image
But now game console driven drones
fly pitiless, torch buttoned bones this sounds comic to me, anything better?
of tank crew members, turrets popped
by top-attacking missiles dropped
against invaders. Users must
lie low to kill: their cause is just. ?
Then Nemesis divides to leave
drone-victims for both sides to grieve. This seemed only a drone vs armor battle, why would drone pilots experience casulties.
Admittedly, I've never been a fan of rhyme. So take my comment with that in mind.
TqB
Maybe if the lines were a bit longer, and the rhymes didn't come so quick........
I did add a few notes for words or phrases.
(03-30-2024, 06:48 AM)dukealien Wrote: Thanks to both critics! Frankly, an idea came with the title and when I returned later to write the poem it just got lost. I don't want to repeat "Eye of Ajax," but have to agree a similar format (or lack thereof) will be a better fit. What's worth saving? Not the knights. Terrorized tankers (ambiguous, so I used the more Russian "tankist"), and the guy with the death-eye. Except the other side can buy drones, too. "I'll be back," as that other Nemesis said...I'll leave to you what's worth saving. Just wanted to say it in no way repeats "Eye of Ajax" which deserves a spotlight; it's a whole different narrative.

