The Unholy Bird; Fear

The Unholy Bird; Fear

A Poem by allie_arrowz
"

with me, my dear

"
              Fear burrows into the deepest gaps
of your mind
and nests there. 

The unholy bird,

it feeds on your obsession,
it thrives off your compulsion.

shoot the bird, shoot the bird!
             kill your fear.

© 2012 allie_arrowz


Author's Note

allie_arrowz
this poem may not sound as personal as my other writing, but it is.

My Review

Would you like to review this Poem?
Login | Register




Featured Review

I like the concept and of course how it is so concise really adds strength to the message. If you were to make it long and rambling it would lose that powerful effect it has, and peter out so it's nice how short the piece it.

Obviously you know by now I don't like rhyming that much and so I personally like how you only have one rhyming couplet in the middle of the poem. It's a nice break and ties your intial point together well with your conclusion.

If I were to make some constructive criticism it would be that I don't personally think "it feeds..." and "it thrives..." particularly works. I think it would sound better, more natural if it were "Feeding on your..." and "Thriving off your..." But that really is just my personal preference. At the same time I can see why you've included that prefix as it does make the poem slightly less agreeable and more direct, rather than circling the point. It makes the reader be completely aware of what is going on and isn't comfortable to hear. So in that sense it's a nice inclusion.

I like the last part, obviously, as it's so far removed from the rest of the piece. It's a conclusion out of nowhere with an almost different voice that delivers the piece of advice. I could imagine some old, wise voice reading up until that point rather smoothly and calmly, and then only for his voice to cackle and distort as he screams shoot the bird.

I think this is definitely better than your other stuff as it's a deeper message and you've experimented well.

Although one thing I'd like to know is why you called the bird unholy? Not that I have a problem with it, I'm just intrigued as to why you think the bird is unholy.

Posted 11 Years Ago


4 of 4 people found this review constructive.

allie_arrowz

11 Years Ago

thank you!!!!!!! after reading this, i considered changing those two lines but for some reason i li.. read more



Reviews

Fear does that creeps in takes a hold of your mind , body . Lovely flow. Shoot the bird..

Posted 11 Years Ago


1 of 2 people found this review constructive.

Or one could just cut the wings off of the bird and watch as fear flails around helpless. I really like this piece very well written and thought out. To the point and that serves it well.

Posted 11 Years Ago


1 of 2 people found this review constructive.

I like the concept and of course how it is so concise really adds strength to the message. If you were to make it long and rambling it would lose that powerful effect it has, and peter out so it's nice how short the piece it.

Obviously you know by now I don't like rhyming that much and so I personally like how you only have one rhyming couplet in the middle of the poem. It's a nice break and ties your intial point together well with your conclusion.

If I were to make some constructive criticism it would be that I don't personally think "it feeds..." and "it thrives..." particularly works. I think it would sound better, more natural if it were "Feeding on your..." and "Thriving off your..." But that really is just my personal preference. At the same time I can see why you've included that prefix as it does make the poem slightly less agreeable and more direct, rather than circling the point. It makes the reader be completely aware of what is going on and isn't comfortable to hear. So in that sense it's a nice inclusion.

I like the last part, obviously, as it's so far removed from the rest of the piece. It's a conclusion out of nowhere with an almost different voice that delivers the piece of advice. I could imagine some old, wise voice reading up until that point rather smoothly and calmly, and then only for his voice to cackle and distort as he screams shoot the bird.

I think this is definitely better than your other stuff as it's a deeper message and you've experimented well.

Although one thing I'd like to know is why you called the bird unholy? Not that I have a problem with it, I'm just intrigued as to why you think the bird is unholy.

Posted 11 Years Ago


4 of 4 people found this review constructive.

allie_arrowz

11 Years Ago

thank you!!!!!!! after reading this, i considered changing those two lines but for some reason i li.. read more
Hmmm, an interesting blend of Emily Dickonsen and Sylvia Plath feel here... I love that you used a bird to embody fear---usually a bird represents hope. But, would fear (a bird) burrow? Use it's talons!

Posted 11 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.

allie_arrowz

11 Years Ago

i love emily dickinson :)
It's like a chunk of a climax in a really good movie! Shoot the bird! Kill your fear. I like it!

Posted 11 Years Ago


1 of 3 people found this review constructive.

Allie, I must say, this is by far the shortest and most simple poem I have ever read...What is so amazing about it is the fact that in such few lines you absolutely blew me away....Life can be described in such a way as your bird...And I must say killing the fear is the hardest thing to do...but oh how amazing you make it sound!!! Like the engine roar of a 1969 Shelby Cobra GT500, so simple, yet so mind blowingly amazing!!!!

Posted 11 Years Ago


1 of 5 people found this review constructive.

allie_arrowz

11 Years Ago

aww you're so sweet! thank you so much!
Matty Bosox

11 Years Ago

Not trying to be sweet just trying to be factual...The pleasure of reading and reviewing this was de.. read more

2
next Next Page
last Last Page
Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats

740 Views
17 Reviews
Rating
Added on July 17, 2012
Last Updated on July 19, 2012
Tags: fear, birds, death


Related Writing

People who liked this story also liked..