Spice Level 10ยฝ
after Vince Gotera
I like my chili peppers hot, but stop before I burn my tastebuds off and yell for bread or milk or lemonโs acid tang.
The mild jalapenoโs but a prop that grants the diner bragging rights, but hellโ my peppers need more biteโa sharper fang.
In scorpion, Iโve met my match, then someโ the waiter, worried, asks me, โAre you well?โ Glares, disapprovingly, at laughter from the gang. Florid-faced and tearful, I succumbโ a whimper, not a bang.
This poem was inspired by Vince Goteraโs curtal sonnet, โPapaโs Chili.โ He has been trying to get me to write a curtal sonnet for two years. I have stubbornly resisted. I have been trying to coax him off his shadorma kick for a few months, so when he wrote โPapaโs Chiliโ how could I not relent and try a curtal sonnet?
Vince, by the way, thought I cheated on the last line of this curtal sonnet form, developed by Gerard Manley Hopkins. Itโs supposed to be a 10ยฝ line sonnet, but my original draft was โwith a whimper not a bangโ (six and a half feet). Picky, picky, picky. I would rather it flow, rhythmically, and say what I mean to say than to strictly adhere to the form. That said, I finally settled on this version. I donโt think much is lost by adding an em dash and removing โwith.โ Neither did Vince, who suggested almost the same thing, in a small poetry group we belong to, after I rewrote this. Great minds, or something like thatโฆ
Editing and refinement are half the fun. However, it is so easy to get stuck in a sort of holding pattern, because a poem may never be truly โdone.โ If we fret, revise, add, and subtract, weโll never deem it worthy of publication. It will rot in a drawer, as so much of my writing has done over the years. And once itโs released in the wild, opinions on whether it flows better with an extra metrical foot or needs an ellipsis rather than an em dash are nearly as numerous as the readers whoโve seen the thing. I say โnearlyโ because I suspect most readers, unless they are writers or avid poetry scholars, themselves, wonโt notice or care so long as the writerโs last choice doesnโt trip them up like an unexpected speed-bump on a rural road.
I mentioned the other day that Iโm rarely inspired by โprompts.โ Lately, Iโve been approaching them the way a recalcitrant student might approach a tedious assignment, with a mix of michief, rebellion, and smart-assery. Just โgit โer done,โ right? But Iโll admit I enjoy tossing a gauntlet back and forth, for fun, with my fellow poets. Not a prompt, a challenge โ be it a topic, a response, a form, or some other constraint. I enjoy writing collaboratively, as well.
Poets responding to other poems is an old tradition โ using the original poem as a prompt, a springboard, an invitation to a conversation. I have been doing this with my friend, Necia Campbell, for a couple of years, now. I once sent Vince critique on one of his sonnets โ and wrote it in sonnet form. If the usual type of โpromptโ isnโt working for you, be it in poetry, short fiction, or other forms of writing, consider that the whole world is nothing but prompts. Talk to it. Talk about it. Argue with it. But whatever you do, pay attention to it.

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