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Neopoet Weekly 11/30/25 to 12/06/25

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Highway Sixty-One (by eddy styx)

Upon the Highway Sixty-One,
At witching hour the throng didst meet;
The blacken’d stone with flame was won,
Hell’s fire beneath their restless feet.

Yon roadway, stain’d by lunar gore,
A sickly Blood Moon’s baleful ray,
Did lend a dread unto the corps,
That gather’d there in dark array.

Whilst seraphs caper’d on a pin,
The fiends in riotous revel sway’d;
And should their courses reckless spin,
A broken wing might be betray’d.

’Twas trial fierce of will and might,
Betwixt two powers, stark oppos’d;
Which faction shall the vict’ry sight-
Chaos unchain’d, or order clos’d?

*eddy styx is my murderous malicious Male alter ego who writes dark poetry. He puts His rage on the page instead of acting out.

*Highway sixty-one is also the title of a Bob Dylan lyrics/song.

About This Poem

Last Few Words: archaic language employed.

Style/Type: Structured: Western

Review Request Direction: What did you think of my title?
How was my language use?
What did you think of the rhythm or pattern or pacing?
How does this theme appeal to you?
How was the beginning/ending of the poem?

Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back

Editing Stage: Editing - polished draft

About the Author

Region, Country: Northwestern Wisconsin USA, USA

Favorite Poets: Edgar Allan Poe, William Blake, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Carlos Castaneda, Jim Morrison, the whole of Neopoet and many more., Candlewitch

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Comments

neopoet

neopoet

4 months 3 weeks ago

Neopoet AI (premium) [2025-04]

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

This poem adopts a mock-archaic diction and meter, evoking a gothic or Miltonic atmosphere. The choice of language—“didst,” “blacken’d,” “yon,” “betwixt”—is consistent throughout, which helps sustain the tone, though it risks feeling mannered if not balanced with freshness or narrative drive.

Structurally, the poem is composed of four quatrains with alternating rhyme, though the rhyme scheme is not always consistent (“ray”/“array,” “sway’d”/“betray’d,” etc.), and the meter varies, sometimes disrupting the poem’s musicality. The use of apostrophes to contract words (“blacken’d,” “gather’d,” “vict’ry”) is in keeping with the archaic style, but can feel forced when overused.

Imagistically, the poem is vivid: “blacken’d stone with flame was won,” “lunar gore,” and “seraphs caper’d on a pin” are striking phrases. The “Highway Sixty-One” setting, with its allusions to crossroads mythology and the supernatural, is effective for the theme of conflict between chaos and order. The reference to “seraphs caper’d on a pin” cleverly invokes the medieval question about angels on a pinhead, contrasting with the “fiends in riotous revel.” The “Blood Moon’s baleful ray” and “trial fierce of will and might” reinforce the poem’s apocalyptic mood.

The final stanza explicitly frames the poem’s central conflict: “Betwixt two powers, stark oppos’d; / Which faction shall the vict’ry sight— / Chaos unchain’d, or order clos’d?” This rhetorical question is effective, but the abstractness of “chaos” and “order” could be grounded more concretely in the poem’s imagery or action to increase emotional impact.

The poem’s reliance on established gothic and biblical tropes risks cliché, especially in phrases like “Hell’s fire” and “dread unto the corps.” Greater specificity or a more original angle could deepen the poem’s impact. The poem also gestures toward narrative—a gathering at the highway, a supernatural contest—but the stakes and outcome remain somewhat vague.

Overall, the poem demonstrates control of tone and atmosphere, but would benefit from more concrete detail, a steadier meter, and greater narrative clarity to distinguish it from its influences and to heighten its emotional resonance.

Please send feedback about Neo (our AI critique system) to neopoet.com/contact

Sen99

Sen99

4 months 2 weeks ago

Mr Eddy Styx

Hello CandleW Seems like your alter ego Eddie has a 19Cth Gothic Poe inside him, one of your influences ?

I enjoyed the use of elisions in each stanza, not something often seen in current poems, omitting the vowels with hard consonants, giving it that archaic feel in the story telling, good flow of images 

An effective ending on a question : 

 'Twas trial fierce of will and might,
Betwixt two powers, stark oppos’d;
Which faction shall the vict’ry sight-
Chaos unchain’d, or order clos’d?

This is done well 

thanks

Sen99

 

Candlewitch

Candlewitch

4 months 2 weeks ago

Dear Sen99

Another Neopoet; (the lovely Lady)Lavender, made the suggestion that I try using Archaic language, on another poem of mine. I tried it and had great enjoyment in doing so! Thank you for the really  pleasurable comment!

ever, eddy styx & Cat

p.s.

yes, Poe and others.