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This poem is part of the contest:

05/26 Oceanside Memories

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Turquoise Shadows

The water breathes a heavy, leaden sigh,
and takes the weight of weary limbs below.
No desperate breath, no startled sudden cry,
just quiet drifting in the undertow.
The sunlight fractures into dancing light,
like scattered gems upon a liquid ceiling,
As blue descends to deep and soothing night,
with gentle, cold, and slow-descending feeling.

The pressure is a soft and vast embrace,
a world of liquid glass and silence deep,
Where time forgets to mark its frantic pace,
and gives the restless, finally, their sleep.
The current wraps its arms around the bone,
whilst turquoise shadows whisper to stay,
No longer fighting—nevermore alone,
as light dissolves into the vast, calm grey.

A pearl-lit peace in depths of quiet green,
a long, slow dive into the deep between.

— RJ Bear, May 12, 2026

About This Poem

Review Request Direction: What did you think of my title?
What did you think of the rhythm or pattern or pacing?

Review Request Intensity: Please use care (this is a sensitive subject for me, do not critique harshly)

Editing Stage: Not actively editing

About the Author

Region, Country: Sydney Australia, AUS

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Critiques

neopoet

neopoet

6 days 18 hours ago

Neopoet AI (premium) [2025-04]

The below is a computer-generated response from Neo, Neopoet’s AI:

This poem uses aquatic imagery to explore themes of surrender, peace, and perhaps release from struggle, possibly alluding to death or deep rest. The formal structure—fourteen lines in the main body, followed by a closing couplet—suggests a sonnet-like form, though the rhyme scheme is not traditional. The language is consistent and evocative, with phrases like "leaden sigh," "liquid ceiling," and "pearl-lit peace" providing a lush sensory experience.

Strengths: - Imagery is vivid and immersive, effectively conjuring the underwater setting and its emotional resonance. - The poem maintains a meditative, almost hypnotic tone, reinforced by the steady rhythm and careful word choices. - The theme of surrender is handled with subtlety, avoiding melodrama in favor of a calm, accepting mood. - The closing couplet provides a satisfying sense of closure and deepens the poem’s contemplative atmosphere.

Areas to consider: - The poem leans heavily on familiar aquatic metaphors ("undertow," "liquid glass," "current wraps its arms"), which, while effective, could be made more distinctive with more unexpected or original phrasing. - The rhyme is sometimes slant ("ceiling"/"feeling," "below"/"undertow"), which can be effective, but the inconsistency may distract readers who expect a firmer pattern. Consider whether a more consistent rhyme scheme would strengthen the poem’s musicality, or if a looser approach better serves the content. - The emotional arc is subtle; for readers seeking narrative progression or a sharper turn, the poem’s steady tone may feel static. Introducing a slight shift in perspective or tension could add depth. - Lines such as "The current wraps its arms around the bone" are evocative but might benefit from clarification—does "bone" refer to the body as a whole, or is it meant to evoke a more skeletal, final image? Precision here could sharpen the poem’s impact.

Overall, the poem is cohesive and atmospheric, with a strong sense of mood and setting. Refining some of the imagery and considering the poem’s formal choices could further enhance its effect.

Please send feedback about Neo (our AI critique system) to our contact form.

Geezer

Geezer

6 days 18 hours ago

While...

the rhythm is not full strength; it is not so awfully bad. I found a pace that worked for most of the way through and I'll bet that with a little work, I could vocalize this pretty well. The theme of dark waters and fading light, makes this a peaceful, yet somewhat forbidding scene. Because of a near drowning experience, I felt this keenly. ~ Geez.

Ray Bear

Ray Bear

6 days 1 hour ago

Interesting

Ineresting that you should say the rythm is not awfully bad. As this poem is very special to me,  I had to use Prosodic, to double check your comments on rhythm.  The answer was as follows: 

​Here is a breakdown of how that rhythm is working for you:

​1. Consistent Meter

​The iambic pulse is very strong here. For example:

The sun-light frac-tures in-to dan-cing light

​This consistency creates a "hypnotic" effect, which perfectly matches the theme of sinking and losing oneself in the water. It feels inevitable and calm.

​2. Effective Enjambment

​You’ve used commas and periods to create natural pauses that break up the "sing-song" trap that strictly metered poetry sometimes falls into.

  • The "Heavy" Pause: In the first line, the comma after "heavy" forces the reader to take a breath, making the word feel physically weighted.
  • The Flow: The transition in the second stanza from "silence deep" into "Where time forgets" allows the rhythm to pour into the next line, much like a current.

​3. The Final Couplet

​The shift in the final two lines is a nice touch:

A pearl-lit peace in depths of quiet green,

a long, slow dive into the deep between.

​The rhythm here feels slightly more elongated. Using "long, slow dive" adds three stressed beats in a row (a spondee), which physically slows the reader down as they reach the end of the poem. It mimics the finality of the subject matter.

Geezer

Geezer

5 days 17 hours ago

Thank you...

for the schooling on rhythm. I enjoyed the poem much more, after I had read what the A.I. had to say; then it all clicked! I was falling into that trap spoken of; the urge to make it sing-song. Thank you for bringing this poem out for us to read, I am impressed. ~ Geez.

Ray Bear

Ray Bear

5 days 16 hours ago

Not a problem

It's all good my friend.  Poetry is so subjective especially on how it's read by the audience or read to you by the author. When an author reads their own work, they provide the "definitive" map, the specific pauses, the emotional cracks in the voice, and the intended rhythm. However, once that poem is on a page, the author loses control. Regards Ray 

Geezer

Geezer

5 days 3 hours ago

Yes...

the best that we can do, is to hope the reader goes in the direction we point them with the punctuation and line breaks. After that, you are right, the author loses control. Still, it is the most fun that you can have while wearing clothes and sober. ~ Geez.