eiremauve: Icon of Eowyn from LotR (Disney: Cat lady)
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Title: Cat in the Square
Author: eiremauve
Rating: PG
Warnings: None
Word Count: 103
Prompt: sashay
A/N: This needs to be more poetic. >_<

The humans are sashaying around
to the call of the man lazing on the couch
(he is supposed to be standing up
and clapping to the rhythm,
but no one cares)
So much order, yet such exuberance
I would love to join in, so I do
Why should they stop me?
I walk casually in
slinking around
weaving in between the dancers
But they try to stop me!
As they do whenever I try a reasonable thing
A woman comes and picks me up,
cradling me like a baby
and takes me out of the dance floor
What an insult to my dignity!

EDITOR Part One

Date: 2011-03-13 01:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] toxic-apiaceae.livejournal.com
Hey, eire! My name’s Tox and I’ll be one of your editors this week. It’s a pleasure to meet you! I don’t think I’ve done an edit for you before, so this will be a fun treat for us both.

So, I saw in the notes that you feel this needs to be more poetic. Since you’ve asked for a moderate edit, I’ll try and do my best to possibly help in that, but understand that I’m a little limited on commenting due to the editing level.

One thing that might help give this a more classic poetic vibe rather than reading like prosetry would be to try and set line rhythms. Basically, set a pattern for counts per line and stick with it. By doing this, it creates a lyrical structure and lyricism is a big part of poetry. And setting a rhythm pattern is a great way to suck readers in! They’ll get so caught in the beats that before they know it they’ve reached the end. That’s why all those songs that a person normally hates gets stuck in their head. Rhythm also allows you to control the emotional aspects of a piece. Perhaps it starts off slow and even to reflect the calmness, but then it suddenly starts to speed up, get shorter and more clipped to demonstrate the rising excitement, and then… calm again. It’s a LOT of fun to play with rhythm like this.

Another area that could be touched upon to give it more character and also make it read more like a poem is to play with punctuation. In poetry more so than in prose, doing crazy, creative things with punctuation is a totally okay thing to do. Stick commas at the ends of the lines, use hyphens if you want. You can even choose to play with the text itself by picking out phrases or words that you think are especially important and italicizing/bolding them. Or, if you really wanna go nuts with it, play with font size as well. That’s always a fun way to emphasize or de-emphasize a piece. Basically, what I’m saying is that if in the future it doesn’t read like a traditional, classic poem but you don’t want it to read like prose – let loose on it completely in this regard.

Another idea to make this read more like a poem are to play with line breaks – where one line leaves off and the next starts. One thing I noticed upon reading this through was that almost every single line is a completed thought. This isn’t made, especially if there’s a rhythm established with the words, but it also doesn’t give the reader a reason to carry on reading. If the lines were broken up differently so that in order to find out what happens the reader has to continue on, not only will this create further interest but it’ll also make this read more like a poem. Example: The humans are sashaying/around to the call of/the man lazing on the couch. Granted, that’s probably NOT an ideal example, but it’s the best breaking I could think of short notice. But see how the breaks work to keep the reader going on? It’s a very handy little trick to have and works PEFECTLY for almost any time of poetry.

EDITOR Part Two

Date: 2011-03-13 01:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] toxic-apiaceae.livejournal.com
So, as to the piece itself, some general comments:

I thought this was ridiculously adorable. You establish from the very first line that the narrator isn’t human and then clarify through the last few lines that it’s a cat via tone. I especially love that last line. It was so perfectly cat-like it made me grin.

There’s a lot of very good use of alliteration and description in here. I don’t know if the alliteration of the “S” sounds were intentional or not, but it works very well with the weekly topic. The way the cat was described weaving through the dancers and the man who was supposed to be clapping out the beat were also very good.

There are a few lines that could use some tweaking to make this read a little more cleanly:

to the call of the man lazing on the couch

This line here reads a little awkwardly due to phrasing, particularly in the first segment. “to the call of the man…” It’s a little choppy sounding, so see if it can be rephrased more smoothly.

(he is supposed to be standing up
and clapping to the rhythm,
but no one cares)


I really like this section here! It has the poetic feel that you wanted to establish. The one thing I might suggest is cutting out the “but no one cares”. A cat would care, don’t you think, that someone isn’t doing what they’re supposed to. Or maybe that’s just me. I just think it might read more cat-like if this was switched from being an observation into a critiquing of the man by the cat.


So much order, yet such exuberance

Here, the word choice of “exuberance” seems odd. I know it’s meant to express boundless joy, but the “yet” implies a more contrasting term, something like “recklessness” or “chaos”.

I walk casually in
slinking around
weaving in between the dancers


This here is my favorite part, hands down. The word choice, the structure, the imagery… it’s all fantastic. Nice work!

And that’s all I have for you! Overall, this was cleanly written with an excellent, fun concept that played into not only the topic but the overlying theme very nicely. Just keep working at the poetry and you’ll eventually get to a place where you’re happy with the result. Poetry is, in my opinion (and coming from a VERY heavy prose background), one of the hardest forms of written expression out there. I give you full marks for even attempting it, especially on your first shot out of the gate. Keep it up! It’s a wonderful form of writing and I’m confident that you’ll be able to succeed with it. Good luck and welcome to the community!

Re: EDITOR Part Two

Date: 2011-03-13 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eiremauve.livejournal.com
Oh, wow, thank you so much! :D

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