04-22-2026, 10:14 AM
(04-20-2026, 10:13 PM)JohnS Wrote: Blowing in the breeze.I love the allusion to Bob Dylan's song "Blowin' in the Wind" here. On one hand, the message is very clear, and that's a great thing to achieve; however, I get the impression that the poem is slightly off-the-cuff, perhaps due to the rigid regularity of the diction and syntax. I also felt that the first line in the second stanza was a bit forced and doesn't flow with the rest of the poem. I would have also appreciated if you would have qualified the kind of poet referred to in that line.
These days we watch it on TV
as lives of people crumble.
Drones and bombs and men of war
turn hopes and dreams to rubble.
A poet once cried,
how many more must die,
until too many people have died?
And after all these years we see
the answer’s still blowing in the breeze.
(04-22-2026, 10:14 AM)J.K. Solberg Wrote:apologies if that was a little bit too in depth. I forgot I was in the basic critique section. Overall, I would try to start thinking about the connotation of words more in depth and, once again, be a little less rigid and literal with things. I personally love experimental poetry even when it isn't good!(04-20-2026, 10:13 PM)JohnS Wrote: Blowing in the breeze.I love the allusion to Bob Dylan's song "Blowin' in the Wind" here. On one hand, the message is very clear, and that's a great thing to achieve; however, I get the impression that the poem is slightly off-the-cuff, perhaps due to the rigid regularity of the diction and syntax. I also felt that the first line in the second stanza was a bit forced and doesn't flow with the rest of the poem. I would have also appreciated if you would have qualified the kind of poet referred to in that line.
These days we watch it on TV
as lives of people crumble.
Drones and bombs and men of war
turn hopes and dreams to rubble.
A poet once cried,
how many more must die,
until too many people have died?
And after all these years we see
the answer’s still blowing in the breeze.

