Hi, fortis! Here to review this extremely intriguing poem of yours.
So the vibe I’m getting here is that the sight of sudden snow reminds the speaker of childhood memories that morph into more recent (and more painful) recollections. I feel like this poem goes on for longer than is necessary for your theme, and since a snowflake is something of brief, as is a flash of memory, I feel like this would benefit from using fragments and/or shorter or less stanzas. Just something to consider. Things start picking up the pace towards the end of the 3rd stanza, mainly at the line “Like you wept” - it seems like the first true emotional reaction of the subject of the poem that ties in the perspective of the speaker with that of the subject. I think you should use more of this - you use a bit of an “aerial” point-of-view in this, which can work well with poetry, but I think that since this deals with memories of someone separate from the speaker, it would benefit the poem to ‘cut to the chase,’ if you will. You switch back and forth between this aerial view (as if the speaker is in the sky, looking down on the subject like an ant on the ground - pun intended c;), and the memories/perspective of the subject, which are things that the speaker really couldn’t know unless they were inside the mind of the subject. Or, an option that would not only eliminate the above confusing switch between the perspectives and also would convey the theme of this poem in a more concise and poignant manner would be to let the speaker and the subject be the same person. As in, write it in first-person. I think the theme would be conveyed more directly.
As for the separate stanzas, I think you should nix the first. It really does nothing to contribute to the overall idea of the poem.
The second is a bit jarring; I like where you’re going with it, especially the “wrist had slipped right through” part, but it kind of comes out of the blue. Maybe keep this, but provide more of a foundation for it in the 1st stanza.
Third stanza - good. Makes me think of the phrase, “misery loves company.”
The fourth stanza feels a little like rambling - but I get that the first mention of snow is important, so maybe you could find a way to work that into the third stanza, since you’re already talking about weather and oblivion and such.
Fifth stanza doesn’t really seem to contribute to the poem much, either. I like the whole introduction of a third character - this mysterious “she” - and I think you should keep her mysterious. I like the way you mention this “she” in the last stanza, in a fleeting way. Like a flashback. Like a snowflake. Remember your overarching metaphor - you want to reflect that in not only your content, but your aesthetics, as well.
Sixth and seventh stanza are my favorite, by far. The only suggestion I have for those is to be less “showy” - it gets a little prose-y with the “he grins” and such. But that’s all I would change!
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Great poem, overall! I will definitely check out some of your other work.
Best,
Indie.
Points: 1337
Reviews: 67
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