I might as well start with the first poem, yeah?
positives
I tend to crave putting questions in my poetry because it sets an example for the rest of the descriptions. If you start asking about clouds and their movement, the bulk of readers will understand that you're going to be focusing on sky imagery. That makes things a load easier for all parties because it's still provoking feelings without being pretentious.
Can I follow them?
I'm beginning to consider that our narrator figure is a child or at least someone who is more lighthearted. When I was a child, I was so fascinated by clouds. I believe a lot of people were (and might still be) due to the process where they disappear and reappear so suddenly.
The last line advances my suspicion of a child narrator doing all of the interrogations. The term of endearment "dear" is typically used by people in romantic attachments and mothers, but the environment suggests to me more of a motherly kind of connection overall.
Now it all makes sense, I suppose. Mothers are some of the most influential people to many and arguably really, really major parts of lives throughout the world. Of course, they would be the individuals to answer all of those complicated questions.
suggestions
I mentioned having questions being a genuinely good thing because it's profiting the narrator's personality type, but I believe several of the questions are counterproductive to the actual content of the poem. It could be the exact same with identical results without some of them.
The longer questions that take up many lines are content to the poem; they need to be there for someone to understand the basics of your topic and theme. A great example of what I'm trying to say here with content would be: "do they drift and drift / until they disappear/ cry because they're lost / and cause a big rain?"
The shorter questions that summarize preceding concepts and repeat at times are not content to the poem; they can be categorized as filler lines because there isn't any further information gathered. The primary example that caused me to bring this up would be the secondary restatement of "where do the clouds go?"
Besides that, you're pretty solid here - I'll be moving onto another now.
Cheers! <3
Points: 630
Reviews: 215
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