View Single Post
  #84  
Unread 07-26-2013, 09:38 AM
Christopher ONeill Christopher ONeill is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Cardiff, Wales, UK
Posts: 333
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew Sacks View Post
#1. "Calypso"

My only vote.
I think Andrew makes an interesting point about how poems behave in competitions.

Some of these sonnets have met with widespread enthusiasm, others have polarised opinion. Like Andrew, I find I am most attracted to poems with a foot in both camps.

When I think about the classical composers I delight in today, there are a few whom I loathed in my teens (outstandingly Ravel, and perhaps Mozart). The music I 'sort of' enjoyed when younger, I find now lacks the urgency to hold my attention.

My second and third choices are very much poems which make me want to see other work from the same authors:- in the hope and expectation that I will find something even better. 'Calypso' was the only poem here which I felt I had to accept on its own terms, or not at all.

It is not a poem I wish I had written. I know full well I could never have written those lines without being someone else.

Another feature which attracted me to the piece.