Candlewitch
Candlewitch
Jan 17, 2012

Endless Sleep (*iambic for meter workshop)

Endless Sleep

Oh Lord, the light is fading and the room is spinning 'round.
My life before me ending as I watch the rain beat down...
When hearts are heavily laden with haunting fears and pain,
the room is filled with loneliness and sounds of falling rain...
The molten shame of memories, smolder in my private tomb.
The endless roads and streets of hell, that I walk alone;
soon shall be forgotten. I'll embrace the endless sleep.
Faith forsaken, abandoned by all hope,
my dreams have turned to dust.
Deep within this desolation,
my weary spirit knows its destination's thrust..
After years of searching for their rightful place...
All lost sheep come home some day, to the endless sleep.

*this poem is for the meter workshop (iambic). I know it needs alot of work, because I only have a very basic idea of what I am doing. Please help? I posted it somewhere else concerned with workshops, and now I can't find it!!! If you've seen it, please let me know where it is? Thanks, Cat

About This Poem

Review Request Direction: What did you think of my title?
How was my language use?
What did you think of the rhythm or pattern or pacing?
How does this theme appeal to you?
How was the beginning/ending of the poem?
Is the internal logic consistent?

Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back

Editing Stage: Editing - rough draft

About the Author

Region, Country: Northwestern Wisconsin USA, USA

Favorite Poets: Edgar Allan Poe

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Comments

emogothgirl

that last line is confusing me a little. with iambic, would it be

All lost sheep come home some day, to the endless sleep?

this whole "meter" thing is new to me. i think that line is the only one that gave me trouble. it could use some touching up, but very nice by the way.

always,

mag

Race_9togo

I like this one a lot.
But I would like to see it fiercely structured, in terms of meter. A set number of stresses on every line, no more, and no less, and no exceptions.

iambic pentameter would read

da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM

on every line, for a total of five sets of unstressed and stressed parts, the first part unstressed, the second stressed - da-DUM.

In case your wondering, I ALWAYS use 'da-DUM', when I write this kind of poetry, lol, it makes things so much easier. I write it, then sit and count the stresses on my fingers!

S

Try reading just the first 2 words of each line. In Iambic the 1st syllable should always be unstressed or unaccented. Try reading these 1st 2 words and I think you will spot the ones which(I think) are trochaic or where 1st syllable is stressed............stan