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Reflect · Poetry Minific ·
Organised by Anon Y Mous
Word limit 50–1000

Original fiction.

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Paper Planes
A silly childhood memory?
I once made a paint calzone and called it
a butterfly! But get this:
A high modernist once took upon himself
the soporific task
Of tessellating squares and
(Taking right angles and straight lines,
The high ground with fine wines
&Pythagoreanism to its irrational limit)
Calling the whole thing a human life.
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#1 · 2
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So this one is fairly structureless, meaning I'm not going to have much to add. Where to put line breaks is mostly going to be determined by keeping them all roughly a similar length or by the poet's whims.

As to the message? What I get out of it is that human life is as silly a thing as a child making up some nonsense. Which isn't a bad way to phrase it. I kind of like this one.
#2 · 1
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I honestly thought we'd be getting a lot more free verse entries, but this was one of our only ones!

I really like the mood of this one.—it's almost like a haiku with how contemplative it is. The relationships that it draws between art and human existence aren't completely answered, but I think that's perfect for the scope of a short poem. You clearly meant to incite thought, and you did.

Thanks for submitting!
#3 ·
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The tessellations and limits of Pythagoras made me think of Escher, but his art is far from soporific. Interesting imagery.
#4 · 2
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This starts edging toward:

One of the reasons why I don't like reading poetry. It makes me think of a snippet of a conversation I might overhear in passing and feel oh so grateful that it wasn't a conversation I was involved in. Because I don't understand what it's talking about—I had to look up "tessellating," for instance, to make sure it meant what I thought it meant, and the whole parenthetical bit just leaves me scratching my head.

Now, it's perfectly fine to write a poem that makes arch commentary about current events or ways of thinking. But when you meet a reader like me who doesn't know the details of whatever current event or way of thinking you're commenting on, well, the poem doesn't do much...

Mike
#5 · 1
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As a mathematical Platonist, this pisses me off, author.

But I like the poem, and it's one of the better ones. I'd put it even higher, but I think I'm missing some too-hidden cleverness (the worst kind). The &P especially gives me pause.