My
editor Melissa Manlove thought my RAIN poem was "lovely!" Still, she
wanted me to revise it. She wrote: ...after
'windowpanes', though, I keep expecting to hear its rhyme in 'drains'... are
you sure you don't want that word in there somewhere? The last three
lines feel less powerful to me than the previous ones. I suggest you
confine yourself to the imagery that might reasonably be in front of your main
character-- you start getting too far afield at the end.
My
original RAIN poem:
Polka dot sidewalks.
Freckle windowpanes.
Roll off rooftops and gurgle down
gutter spouts.
Patter around a porch in silver
slippers.
Dimple a quiet pond.
Tickle tulips and glisten the
grass.
Tiptoe over silken seas.
Look for a lost rainbow.
After
revising the poem, the first two lines remained the same--but nearly everything
else changed. In addition, it became a rhyming poem.
Polka dot sidewalks.
Freckle windowpanes.
Whoosh down gutter spouts.
Gurgle into drains.
Patter ’round the porch
In slippers of gray.
Tap dance on the roof.
Then…
Go away.
REMINDER: I am giving
away signed copies of my book THINGS TO DO during National Poetry Month. I will
collect the names of people who have commented on my blog posts each week in
April and put them in a bag. Next Sunday, I will draw a name from the bag of
someone who commented on a post that I published during the week of April 8-14.
Drawing dates: April 15, 22, 29, 30.
1 comment:
Oh, I LOVE reading about the editing process and getting a peak behind the scenes. I also think your original is lovely, and the revision (which I already read since it's on my bookshelf!), is pitch perfect. Thank you so much for sharing this!
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