Xavier, you write with such a passion and put so much information into your poems that I feel I learn something either knew or in more depth when I read you.
while rumblings never disrupted circle geological marker
old twin rails witnessed transition from steam to diesel
the typical teen boy's snap shot love is ever living, as iron never rust under trestle, chiseled clearly, without getting any damage from the rumblings of trains passing from steam engine to diesel engine, means a very long time, typical teenager used menthol, tobacco,wine and acted as typical teenager by throwing wine glass or bottle in to the tracks, I will say lucky that teenager in that decade compared to today's, look at some teens of today, pressurized like inside the pressure cooker, uses maijuana, molley, coccaine, heroine, ectasy, vodka,kills brain cells, won't limit to wine products of five and dime,becoming unproductive to society for long time, poor teenager of this decade, he probably will not even go to trestle
well written, splendid imagination supported by facts from the past, enjoyed it fully
Posted 11 Years Ago
11 Years Ago
(: thank you for your usual delving review. you remind me to be thankful for the problems i have bec.. read more(: thank you for your usual delving review. you remind me to be thankful for the problems i have because they could certainly be worse :)
11 Years Ago
You most welcome, my pleasure, as per me none of us have problems, problem is our perspective, take .. read moreYou most welcome, my pleasure, as per me none of us have problems, problem is our perspective, take care
If only we knew what all those trestles know! Kind of like, "if walls could talk." Train trestles must be a part of every teen's life that grew up in rural America. This piece sure does bring back fond memories. I can smell that creosote as I type. You are very talented. This is a gift from God. I'm glad that you are not wasting it.
~Claire in VA
Posted 11 Years Ago
11 Years Ago
(: thank you so much for the review and recognizing the source of the talent. :)
This has some good parts to it. I sense that you really like thickly-worded description, and that is more than ok! However, I again challenge you to limit the number of different images you use in any one piece, as the ultimate message tends to get muddled with too many things to compare. I do love the power of the last stanza, though, and you should keep that one just the way it is!
Posted 11 Years Ago
11 Years Ago
(: thank you for your challenging reviews. i seriously take every comment into consideration. :)
Not exactly an activity I participated in, but have a few with my own brand on it. Thus it reminds me of carefree teenage temptations, friendships, harmless pranks, fun without getting caught...so many times I wish I were 17 again...good age for me and great friends.
i grew up in maryland, where we had trestles just like the one you describe, would sit out on the edge and watch the fireflies rise at dusk and breathe in the sweet honeysuckle....later we'd go there to make out, be bad boys, and just generally .... start rebellion.
oh how your words bring all that back.
Posted 11 Years Ago
11 Years Ago
(: how coincidental is it that a friend and i were just talking about honeysuckle? not to mention al.. read more(: how coincidental is it that a friend and i were just talking about honeysuckle? not to mention all of the similar activities taking place. thank you for stopping by skinless :)
"A poet's work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep."
-Salman Rushdie more..