E - Everyone

darkness in a shade of light blue

a flying beetle protests

from outside the sunroom window

.

nub of a tail flicking

my cat sits under the sill

drawn to it like mosquitos near sitting water

.

asks me to contribute to the lost cause

eyes unblinking like two mirrors

facing each other

.

i think about how many definitions

are used for the english word "poor"

.

one two i open

the window

before three

.

the cat

pounces on the beetle

it leaks black

like oil

Comments & reviews · 5
Note: You are not logged in, but you can still leave a comment or review. Before it shows up, a moderator will need to approve your comment (this is only a safeguard against spambots). Leave your email if you would like to be notified when your message is approved.

User avatar
yubbies21
Review

Hello! It's Yubbies!

I understood it in a moment. It all made sense, the dropping subtle clues! I love it, it is amazing. Other people though, who aren't keeping close track of the going-ons over-there, will probably not understand it. Using such a complicated metaphor is difficult to understand sometimes.

It's a great poem and I don't think I would change anything about it. It has a clever metaphor, excellent rhythm, and perfect wording. Congratulations on a job well done!

Keep Writing!

yubbies21 or Knight Yubbies

Random avatar
JennTay
Comment

to be honest, when i read this i was a bit disapointed. I would have never been able to get that this poem was a metaphor for the strikes in Pakistan. i do like that concept though, of creating a poem as a metaphor. That is really creative.

User avatar
confetti
Comment

I dig this.
I do think it could be enhanced with punctuation, but the line breaks were placed well enough that it isn't a huge issue. Nice work

Random avatar
Cole
Comment

I'm reserving a spot to review this, just so you know!

Oh! I forgot about this! I'll review it soon.

User avatar
Omi1
Review
Omi1 wrote a review · Tue Nov 12, 2013 5:03 pm

Unless there was a reason to using no punctuation and or capitalization, I would recommend changing that. It seems far to casual and as for the message of the poem, I honestly don't know what you are trying to get across. All I understand is that it's got something to do with a window, a beetle, and a cat, but I just don't get it. Maybe you could work on you clarification... The ending is even stranger, do you think you could explain it to me? Also, I don't understand what the title has to do with the poem itself...it all seems so weird...

As for the positive in this poem, I really like the detail you've included. I can just picture this cat ready to pounce on this beetle. The scene is so well described that I can almost feel it, but like I said, you should include a message or maybe tweak a few phrases so that your audience can understand it better. :) The best of luck to you!

For what it's worth, the poem is basically an overarching metaphor for US drone strikes in Pakistan.



More than anything she wanted the world to be uncomplicated, for right and wrong to be as easily divided as the black and white sections of an Oreo. But the world was not a cookie.
— Roshani Chokshi, Aru Shah and the Tree of Wishes