When adding a chorus to a lyrical piece, just add the words out, don't type out chorus repeat 2xs. Although, you as an author already know the chorus, the read doesn't, and would have to scroll up to reread it. Thus, creating confusing, and the idea are to make the transition from stanza to stanza easy and have a go flow. (This would also limit the need to label the chorus part, as the reader would understand the repetitive part is the chorus.)
Remember to slow your pieces down, say it a lot, when you pause, or an idea pauses, this means the sentence has ended, or a coma is needed, for example, "Like a rose, love dies." Also, use the correct conjunctions, but is the same as however, also is the same as in addition. So in the second sentence, you might want to change but =P
"My heart which opens once again" change which to that.
There was only one line that I didn't understand in the poem itself, "I’m calling you silently" Not so much for the content that it was saying, but so much that it just didn't seem to fit (then again I have a thing against adverbs xD)
Resentment and a grudge is what the song seems to be pushing towards. The big question that everyone has to ask themselves once in their lives, can they forgive someone who's stabbed them in the back, and if so, how far will that forgiveness go, and farther more, will they do it again? That's what this song seems to be addressing. I think I'd like to hear an answer to that question. Nevertheless, I don't think in reality, that there is a _true_ answer to that question. Its rhetorical in a sense. (Now I'm rambling about the rhetorical sense of forgiving someone that one is in love with and being blind sighted and how much can ones self take...)
One thing is clear in this song; the reader can see the agony that the narrator has to face.
Kae
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