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		Alright. I have enough time for a poem, so here's my move. Will be more active next week. =) 
 For The First Time
 Qe4+
 
 Light strokes, soft licks, and my body purrs.
 I can only tremble and stutter,
 she puts me under gentlest arrest.
 
 A million thoughts speed past,
 my mind the blurry highway;
 am I asleep, is this real?
 
 We lock together, hands and body,
 then everything melt, like a dream fading.
 And I start to melt as well, into her.
 Or is it her into me?
 
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		I really liked "my mind the blurry highway" 
 Here's my move and response poem.
 
 
 The First Time
 
 Qe2
 
 Feels like 14 clowns
 in a compact car
 wondering what to do
 with their hands,
 
 and is never as good
 as the second time.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Hmm. Don't think clowns have trouble knowing what to do with their hands. =x It's quite a cute reply though. But really, everyone's first time is terrible.
 Working on my poem now. =)
 
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		GrannyQxc2
 
 Gray hair,
 hunched back,
 wrinkles,
 walking stick.
 
 Life leaves imprints on its canvas
 with too much colours, too much fervour.
 It evolves from hyperrealism to impressionism,
 leaving only shadows of previous portraits
 on the same canvas.
 
 Losses,
 fatigue,
 worries,
 obstinance.
 
 Scars of when she got her back against the ocean,
 of when trials and challenges excite,
 and of when she could still taste the sweetness of life.
 Time left apathy, took away the sparkle from her eyes and the curve of her lips
 when she realized she outlived all her sons.
 
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		Hey Brandon, some cool stuff here. Your last line implies your move (which was nice). I think that a stronger starting place might be to excise the shorter lines.
 Here's my move and poem:
 
 In the Box
 
 Nc3
 
 There is a scorpion
 and a key.
 Perhaps they are
 the same.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I can't seem to make the lines as concise as I want them to be. It's quite annoying. >< Will be looking at this one again after the game though. Strangely, I can see how your poem and the move actually link. Is it referring to how after the knight moves your bishop is protected?
 Clockwork
 Nd5
 
 A god will never have you take your own life,
 he’ll let the world do it for you.
 
 Talent will never be enough,
 but hard work is futile too at times.
 
 Ambition and being realistic get you to places,
 but wandering around gets you somewhere too.
 
 A devil will never murder you,
 he’ll let living do it from the inside.
 
 Think too much, and paradoxes will consume.
 Curiosity is a blessing and a curse.
 
 Think too little, get controlled blissfully.
 Ignorance is a blessing and a curse.
 
 Either way, all stay as cogs in a machine,
 with occasional hope-filled sparks.
 
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		This one of yours has promise, once you distil it down a bit. I have my move, but have to get ready for work. The poem will be later.
	 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		03-30-2013, 11:54 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-01-2013, 03:15 AM by Todd.)
	
	 
		Always Winter
 d3
 
 Jadis
 
 The first flakes were red, not white.
 Before light, before night, there was
 an everlasting tree.
 
 Before the tree,
 if you held a stone
 to your ear
 It would whisper
 
 of seeds beneath soil--
 the buds restless.
 
 If you warmed the stone
 between your hands,
 it would pulse like the heart
 of a traitor,
 
 like a blush
 on your too-white skin.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Hello fellow chess player! The poems now too bad..
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Todd: That reads like a love poem, except not really. It's kind of abstract as well, and I actually enjoy that.
 trueenigma: Hi! =) Yeah, I know the pieces I post here are really bad as of late. Hopefully after some tweaks and fixes, maybe even overhauls, they'll be better. That will come after the game though.
 
 Bystander
 Nb4
 
 He lived in a cloud.
 He saw the good, the bad, and the ugly,
 but he didn’t judge.
 He just felt and indulged
 in whatever magic occurring inside him
 until he’s old.
 
 What he observed,
 was a grander design
 and beings not realizing that,
 blissful, beautiful in their own ways.
 
 What he heard,
 was ceaseless cacophony
 taking on different forms
 even in silence.
 
 What he smelt,
 was variety.
 Some good, most bad,
 but the good tends to stay with him more.
 
 What he saw didn’t bother him much,
 because he’s happy, and the emotion is real.
 That’s enough for him.
 
 What he heard was annoying,
 but he got used to it,
 and his hearing worsened anyway.
 
 What he smelt let him remember,
 especially the good ones.
 So he takes in the scent wherever he goes.
 
 What he felt, was
 loneliness.
 
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		04-01-2013, 03:17 AM 
(This post was last modified: 04-01-2013, 03:21 AM by Todd.)
	
	 
		 (03-31-2013, 08:18 PM)trueenigma Wrote:  Hello fellow chess player! The poems now too bad.. 
Hello,    
They're more creativity exercise, less poem at this stage.
 
 
Okay Brandon, if you were to rewrite this one. I'd suggest not making me ask, is HE Clint Eastwood? Beyond that you may want to scramble the senses a bit. Have him hear smells and see tastes. I like the final loneliness idea as long as you ground it with concrete imagery. 
 
I'll address your move of the knight with my move and poem.
	 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		04-01-2013, 09:10 AM 
(This post was last modified: 04-01-2013, 12:33 PM by Todd.)
	
	 
		Brandon: Upon reflecting on your poem more, I get a read of God and dementia or Alzheimer's for an aging loved one. There's a good poem in the idea.
 The Secret of the Moon
 
 0-0
 
 Young love is for the light of the moon.
 Something mothers know, and daughters learn.
 Shared whispers flee as retreating tides.
 Fidelity is for the bright day.
 Night's only promise is to transform.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I'm still not sure how you got Clint Eastwood. >< The last line of yours should be 'to transform', right? The imagery is nice, but it feels like it's lacking something more... substantial I feel. That only females are mentioned explicitly makes me wonder if it's talking about rape. Yeah. Anyway, I'll be back with my move and poem.
	 
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		The good, the bad, and the ugly = Eastwood.
 Thanks for catching the typo.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		JumpQxe2
 
 Feet planted,
 soles push against concrete.
 
 Gather strength, focus on the thighs.
 Feel the skin grind against the ground.
 
 Now uproot yourself,
 Yes!
 Reach out for the castle in the sky,
 become part of the wind!
 
 And in the next moment,
 wake up.
 Humans are not meant to fly.
 
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		04-03-2013, 01:08 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-03-2013, 06:33 PM by Todd.)
	
	 
		I very much like this one Brandon. You carry the idea along well. Here's my move:
 Regicide
 
 Nxe2
 
 Legend said she slept
 on twenty mattresses
 for a thousand years,
 her skin remaining
 like confectioners' sugar.
 
 One day she awoke
 to a prince's kiss, or a pea.
 
 She stood above the crowd
 on a spiraling balcony
 of creamy fondant.
 
 This music box dancer
 executed a precise pirouette,
 and ignoring their knives
 offered them more than bread.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		04-03-2013, 04:11 PM 
(This post was last modified: 04-03-2013, 04:12 PM by billy.)
	
	 
		can someone break the concept of this thread down for me, i've been reading some of the writing in it and think you're both doing great, i'm just not sure i follow the where and why-fore of it?
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-03-2013, 04:11 PM)billy Wrote:  can someone break the concept of this thread down for me, i've been reading some of the writing in it and think you're both doing great, i'm just not sure i follow the where and why-fore of it? 
Okay, I'll try. Two people play a game of chess. They mark each move with chess notation, and in my case use an online site to follow the moves. With each move they write a poem which is inspired by the move. It doesn't have to openly relate to chess though some of them do. It's mostly a creative exercise to get you writing. The poems are generally lightly edited first drafts. At the end of the game, the players decide if they want to workshop anything.
	 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		You make the Queen exchange sound too elegant. It lacks the hair pulling and name calling. =x Anyway, I like your poem a lot, although the killing part sort of comes out of nowhere.
 Young Love
 Bf5
 
 I’ll never learn
 that white lies can hurt too.
 To protect is an excuse
 to alleviate guilt,
 and run away.
 
 Not because I can’t,
 but because I don’t want to.
 I choose instant fireworks
 over painstakingly grown flowers.
 Both are beautiful,
 but one lasts for ages,
 the other moments.
 
 I’ll never learn.
 
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		Sorry for the delay Brandon. I liked your fireworks vs flowers set up. Here's my move and poem:
 Love and the Leidenfrost Effect
 
 Be3
 
 You are a frost kissed rose,
 and the bees are snowflakes.
 
 We only believe we've drawn close
 in the fogged breath of this lacy vapor.
 
 You are pale, white against white.
 So that I cannot remember
 
 the touch of a hand,
 the brittle certainty of contact.
 
The secret of poetry is cruelty.--Jon Anderson
 
		
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