Game Piece
She'd live as a cardboard cutout,
brass fastener at the elbow
and base of the neck-
to tip her head slightly
as if listening.
She'd smile.
She'd adjust her position
with the feminine precision,
secured in the mold she was given
when the game began.
Then, she'd simply stand
and watch herself lose.
.
Original
She'd live as a cardboard cutout,
brass fastener at the elbow
and base of the neck-
to tip her head slightly
as if listening.
She'd smile.
She'd adjust her position
with the feminine precision
that was expected of her,
secured in the mold she was given
when the game began.
Then, she'd stand still and watch herself lose
until it was over.
.
Game Piece
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- Productive Poster
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Nice. And punchier than your usual, more loquacious style. I like it a lot, especially the sparse, terse first stanza. I think you could lose few of the details from the second stanza: its first couplet is brilliant, I love the rhyme of position with precision, but I think that generates quite a lot of sardonic comedy on its own which is then diluted by the comment 'that was expected of her'. It is implied by the previous two lines and just seems like an unnecessary authorial intervention to me. Similarly you could trim the last couplet - 'lose' is surely communicated by the entire weight of the poem, and will gain in force by being unstated I think.
A pleasure as always, thanks for the read
A pleasure as always, thanks for the read
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- Perspicacious Poster
- Posts: 7482
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2008 10:23 am
I like the idea and I think the opening stanza is good. The 3rd stanza bothers me, it seems a bit vague. I'd have liked something on the lines of eventually being able to move to the correct square/position before the dice had stopped rolling.
I'm out of faith and in my cups
I contemplate such bitter stuff.
I contemplate such bitter stuff.
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- Productive Poster
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Nice one. A good example of less is more, with the terser revision stronger than the original.
Best regards,
Alan
Alan
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- Perspicacious Poster
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- Location: At the end of stanza 3
I loved the tipping head, Suzanne. Liked the whole, which had a nice dark humour to it. I could see N being moved around the board.
Seth
Seth
We fray into the future, rarely wrought
Save in the tapestries of afterthought.
Richard Wilbur
Save in the tapestries of afterthought.
Richard Wilbur