This topic contains 5 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by Stephanie Gonzaga 10 years, 9 months ago.
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Build Your Writing Platform
Without Abandoning Your Writing › Forums › Critique Groups › [SCC] Rule 1, Exercise 2 › The Leopard and The Python
This topic contains 5 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by Stephanie Gonzaga 10 years, 9 months ago.
Oooh, intriguing! I really like the feel of this; I can see the dark jungle all around.
Question: why the choice of the world “cub?” (I’m just curious!)
Hi Ruthanne,
Thank you! I didn’t want to use words that would humanize the leopard (e.g. son, child), so I used “cub”.
Now that I think about it, “young” might be a better term though it isn’t clear if she had just a single cub or more than one in a litter. Details. 🙂
What do you think?
I like this. At first I thought, would the mother really leave ground zero silently? No weeping and wailing? Then I thought, this isn’t the Lion King, Ebony. There is something powerful about her silently walking away from the murderous scene. Nice work!
Thank you, Ebony! Yup, these incidents are all part of survival. There’s really nothing else left to do but to move on. That’s what fascinates me about animals—their inner ability to keep moving forward.
Edited the poem this morning and gave it a new title:
Within the Brushwood
Leopard sees
Python slither
From where she left her young;
Flexing fresh claws
from the hunt
She tears the scales,
rips the flesh apart.
Python bleeds
A trail
As he descends
Into the dark wood,
and Wind sweeps
Dry leaves
from the empty belly of the den.
Silent, she leaves the grave behind.
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Copyright © 2013 · Story Cartel