butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 84,356
hello no, i agree with you about not throwing out the baby with the bathwater: a reduction should serve the purpose of decluttering, polishing, without changing (or to change for the better) the original meaning. Personally, as i rewrite pieces, i will change their original meaning in order to try and find the better poem within. What i saw 12 do, and offer as yet another reduction that - as he states - changes meaning again, is just where my mind immediately took Senna's write. It's not necessarily a good thing to do, as it's changing it to something from my own perspective rather than the poem's - but it IS what i saw. And preferred, truth be told. But that's ok, to prefer something, just not to attempt to impose - which I don't believe I did.I agree if the sole purpose is to reduce the words. But I don't think other poetic devices should be thrown out the window. There's a hypnotic effect in the sound of the poem for me in Senna's version with the feminine endings, inclusive of the title, and then the variation at the end. I'm not a big fan of short poems (I think basically because I'm a story teller at heart), but I enjoyed the craft I saw in both versions.
Butters has to go to work. Sitting on her head would make traveling quite uncomfortable. Senna, ivory towers are only good for a few things, and tend to get quite lonely after a spell.First of all, thank you greenmountaineer for your kind comment about both of my versions.
My both poems, the short and the longer one, are very good. In general, there are poems of different style and scope. Some of them are very good. They cannot be compared, one with another or any with mine, either way. But it's simply hard to find any poem which would match mine, which would be simply better than mine.
Butters wrote: this is where my head wanted...--Butters should sit on her head or else her head is totally wasted. The same goes for Tshota who ignorantly volunteered: These are both pretty bad (Tshota talked about my shorter poem and about someone's added boring junk).