Comments : Wounds of the Knife

  • 17 years ago

    by I Seem to be the Heartless

    Nice poem!! Real dark and intrique. Great flow.

    Excellent 5/5

    Josie

  • 17 years ago

    by Maddie

    Its really dark but i like it. good job

  • 17 years ago

    by Brittany C

    Great poem. Nice flow and great word choice all the way through. Keep it up:)
    I gave a 5/5.

  • 17 years ago

    by Andrew Morton

    "Crimson red and maroon" excellent..excellent choice of words, you created a masterpiece without cramming it full of metaphorical scenarios..this is truly amazing work..keep it up!

  • 17 years ago

    by Simple Sensation

    The imagery in this poem was really excellent. You could kindof see this really blood soaked tourniquet in the minds eye. This creates an entire image, and this image shows that theres a story behind it and i want to know wyhat this story is. What caused you to take the knife. Seems like your thinking about death alot though. Are you ok? Im hear if you need to talk or anything. It intresting how you refered to the wound as salted. This created the image of ocean to me. Maybe... you meant that your wound and the blood was so widesread it was like an ocean? Your rhyming scheme gave the poem a good flow. Youve got quite a bit of reference of religion in this poem. It makes me ownder... i mean suicide is frowned upon on many religions. Purhapse you feeling guilt from doing this? A very intresting read non the less. To improve this i suggest you use punctuation. Keep writing! xx

  • 17 years ago

    by Auspicious76

    Hello and congrats again on your win :-)

    I want to be clear from the start; I am always honest in my reviews. If there are things that need fixed, I will tell you and then explain why. I do not believe in simply saying great poem unless there are no problems. sooooo, with that said:

    SYLLABLE COUNT AND FLOW:

    Though tourniquets may (5 syllables)
    Be wrapped 'round salted wounds (6 syllables)
    The blood still seeps (4 syllables)
    Crimson red and maroon (6 syllables)

    syllable count is VERY important to the rhythm and flow of a poem. To ensure that these are in proper order, read a poem aloud. If you find places that stutter you, they will also stutter the reader. Try this instead:

    Though tourniquets may be
    wrapped 'round salted wounds
    The blood will still seep
    Crimson red and maroon

    Like this, your flow and rhythm are kept smooth and it keeps the reader from stuttering over unneeded words.

    Crusading through Heaven
    While you're in denial

    Crusading stutters the reader. Try instead crusades.

    Quench the thirst for blood (5 syllables)
    As you lay slowly bleeding (7 syllables)
    Drink your sweet tears (4 syllabels)
    It's just what you've been needing (7 Syllables)

    Flow and rhythm are off. Try instead:

    Quench the thirst for blood
    As you lay bleeding
    Drink in your sweet tears
    It's just what you're needing

    Syllable count is closer and flows better.

    May not be the proper choice:
    He will drain you of light

    Try saying that He'll drain you of light.

    Your heart is now dead (5 syllables)
    Cold and blue is your life (6 syllables)
    Your tourniquet wasn't strong enough (9 syllables)
    To stop wounds from the knife (6 syllables)

    To be honest, I have no earthly idea how to fix the third line... but it does not flow correctly. You have a small amout of syllables through the others and then throw in a whopper.

    With all of that said (and you probably wondering what in the world my problem is) I say that this is still a good poem. I like the meaning and the imagery is good

  • 17 years ago

    by ben thompson

    AWESOME DESCRIPTIVE WRITE. VERY WELL WRITTEN. I ENJOYED READING IT. WELL DONE. ALL THE BEST WISHES BEN THOMPSON

  • 17 years ago

    by TillyMariex

    Catchy. i like <333