• Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.

    This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.

    Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…

    • Don't give offence
    • Don't take offence

    We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box

Poetry Do Not Stop the Clocks by Hannah Faoileán

The World Between the Words
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
"Stop all the clocks," Auden said.
I do not want to.
Why stop the clocks when they will keep me here?

I want to rewind them;
go back to the sunshine,
to the beach where you swam in my laughter.

Back to the snow-days
when we were together and time did not matter;

To the white-coated woods
and the flakes in your eyes and the games in the drifts
that promised to keep on drifting

Not now.
Not when I can still see your face
but only behind a picture frame.

I cannot touch you.
I cannot be with you.
I cannot hold you and tell you how much I love you
so, no, Auden.
Do not stop the clocks.
 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
My first critique here and am hoping it's helpful.

Like others, I love the way this evokes the loss. However . . . the bookends of the Auden work distracted me; I just couldn't figure out what you were trying to get across with the idea that the clock "keeps me here." The idea you want to rewind the clock, I get. But again, it doesn't track with the idea of keeping you here. And, again, the closing imagery is wonderfully evocative . . . until the Auden comes back and I'm left wondering why you don't want to stop the clocks instead of sitting with the images of loss you've presented so well.
 
My first critique here and am hoping it's helpful.

Like others, I love the way this evokes the loss. However . . . the bookends of the Auden work distracted me; I just couldn't figure out what you were trying to get across with the idea that the clock "keeps me here." The idea you want to rewind the clock, I get. But again, it doesn't track with the idea of keeping you here. And, again, the closing imagery is wonderfully evocative . . . until the Auden comes back and I'm left wondering why you don't want to stop the clocks instead of sitting with the images of loss you've presented so well.
If the clocks reversed, you could live within the memories you enjoy. If the clocks keep ticking, you can move on, the heart will start to heal. If you stop the clocks, you will remain forever in the place of abject grief that feels too much to bear, the place Auden writes about in "Stop all the Clocks". Since you can't go back, it's better that the clocks keep ticking and let you heal.
Poetry is very subjective. Some people will like the images a poet conjures, and some won't, and that's fine.
 

Latest Articles By Litopians

  • Falcon Theory
    “So,” said Goethe to his friend Johann Peter Eckermann, “let us call it a Novelle, for what i ...
  • The Joy of Lit Mags
    While my first novel is tentatively making its way towards agents who already have too much to read, ...
  • Advertising and Social Media
    There has been much discussion in writing circles about how much a writer has to self-promote these ...
  • Future Abstract: Fights at Night
    SATIRE ALERT: The following abstract is entirely fictional and does not represent actual events or s ...
  • Great Novel Openings Quiz
    As writers, we all know how important it is to grip the reader from the very start. Intriguing, surp ...
  • In The Summertime
    In the early seventies, I had a semi-Afro hairstyle and a shaggy beard. . I thought I looked like th ...
  • Working with a Literary Agent
    The Querying In a previous post I mentioned that I was back in the query trenches. To recap, my earl ...
Back
Top