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  An Absence Of Studied Concern
« on: March 08, 2010, 09:05:19 AM » by silent lotus



below an other look / revision /


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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #1 on: March 08, 2010, 09:53:28 AM » by Tom Riordan
silent
"day-day"
"mist-missed"
then the juxtaposition
of the magical mist minutes
and everyday coffee drinking -
as usual you take us to several different places
and times to listen to their simultaneous overtones,
as usual a challenge that makes the mind feel fitter afterwards! tom
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2010, 01:12:08 PM » by silent lotus

silent
"day-day"
"mist-missed"
then the juxtaposition
of the magical mist minutes
and everyday coffee drinking -
as usual you take us to several different places
and times to listen to their simultaneous overtones,
as usual a challenge that makes the mind feel fitter afterwards! tom



dear Tom

glad the journey bridged a bit of timelessness

many thankyuus for your caring read

silent lotus

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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #3 on: March 09, 2010, 01:32:51 PM » by milner place
Enjoyed, SL. I've just the feeling that if you took the 'had' out of line 5, it would make that sucking of oranges more potent in its directness. Because of a later 'had', though, a lot may depend on how you read it.

milner
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'Caminante, no hay camino,
se hace camino al andar'
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Latest book 'naked invitation' $15 or £10, p&p inc milnerplace@msn.com

  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #4 on: March 10, 2010, 06:38:56 AM » by silent lotus
dear Milner

a very very interesting thought indeed

the ' had ' in line 5 for my ear develops a sense of
something that happened more in the past, as if it was
looking back through a memory.

yet i do hear the pleasure of greater directness which you mention when reading aloud
without the ' had '.

any more thoughts about this would be a welcome discussion.

silent lotus
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #5 on: March 10, 2010, 06:55:48 AM » by silent lotus
thought i might also mention that traditionally Blood Oranges
are ripe for eating lets say from December through April.
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #6 on: March 14, 2010, 10:44:38 AM » by silent lotus

an other look / revision / .......also placed next to the original at the beginning of this thread


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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #7 on: March 14, 2010, 12:22:47 PM » by Kevin Jackson
Dear SL,  a wonder of thought, feeling, place, abstraction.   Quite delightful.

"The dawn of a waveless ocean" is my favourite line...

I prefer the simplicity of the first version, visually.  The greater fragmentation of the other versions disturbs its flow to my eye.

k

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Find out more about me and my poems at http://kevnjacksn.wordpress.com/

  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #8 on: March 14, 2010, 09:06:44 PM » by Jonathan Bracker
basically quite refreshing and provocative, though "sucked on . . . blood. . ." makes that image vampirish to me.  Maybe some other kind of orange or other fruit?  I find the red of blood oranges rather unpleasant also, it being so dark.
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #9 on: March 15, 2010, 01:51:14 PM » by silent lotus

Dear SL,  a wonder of thought, feeling, place, abstraction.   Quite delightful.

"The dawn of a waveless ocean" is my favourite line...

I prefer the simplicity of the first version, visually.  The greater fragmentation of the other versions disturbs its flow to my eye.

k





dear Kevin

i really appreciate your musical view about the visual
and shall take it into careful advisement.

many many thankyuuus

silent lotus
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #10 on: March 15, 2010, 02:11:40 PM » by Tom Riordan
"The dawn of a waveless/Ocean" makes a great visual in version 2, SL. "Between the green/Mountains" has presented an envisioning challenge to me, in both versions, still haven't really incorporated it into my overall reading, so don't really know which version I would choose....Tom
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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #11 on: March 15, 2010, 02:41:14 PM » by silent lotus

"The dawn of a waveless/Ocean" makes a great visual in version 2, SL.

 "Between the green/Mountains" has presented an envisioning challenge to me, in both versions,
still haven't really incorporated it into my overall reading,

so don't really know which version I would choose....Tom


dear Tom

thanks for taking an other look......and pausing for reflection.

the 2nd version took place
after Milner's suggestion to scratch had in the 5th line.

silent lotus

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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #12 on: March 20, 2010, 08:24:14 AM » by silent lotus

basically quite refreshing and provocative,

though "sucked on . . . blood. . ." makes that image vampirish to me. 

Maybe some other kind of orange or other fruit? 

I find the red of blood oranges rather unpleasant also, it being so dark.




dear Jonathan

i really appreciate your sharing the vampirish element with me.
it is a dimension that never came into play for me personally or do i ever remember
anyone else mentioning it to me either.... so thank you for expressing what the
hue does for you.

Blood oranges for me always seem to cause a great uproar of happiness
on the open air markets in Europe and one has to rush to get some
before they disappear each winter.

miles of smiles
silent lotus

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  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #13 on: March 20, 2010, 04:35:56 PM » by Sue Lozynskyj
I much prefer the 2nd Draft, Silent Lotus.  I love the title.  I like the position of the dawn of a waveless ocean in the centre of the poem, the shape of the poem like the light drifting in to those coffee drinkers...Fab.  I'm picking this.
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Chance favours the prepared mind: Louis Pasteur

  Re: An Absence Of Studied Concern
« Reply #14 on: March 20, 2010, 09:15:06 PM » by Rick Stansberger
You never mention it, but the poem oozes stultifying heat.  I really like that.
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Rick's fifth book is out:  Gizmo--love, loss and the passion to know--in the first part of the last century.

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