tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1149217012399643733.post6647746901583949617..comments2023-12-06T00:48:23.734-08:00Comments on Daily Writing Practice: Thursday June 18th, 2015Marchttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14952331166517430843noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1149217012399643733.post-72546054530938671442015-07-02T01:40:43.840-07:002015-07-02T01:40:43.840-07:00Greg - I feel like my best bet is to just wait unt...Greg - I feel like my best bet is to just wait until Max is old enough that I can make him do it :P<br /><br />Ah, I've missed your dictionary definitions. Thank you for bringing them back for this prompt :)<br /><br />Ivy - hah, thanks. And now that you mention it, I think these two could have all sorts of fun and entertaining chats...<br /><br />Fantastic imagery in yours. I would not want to come face to face with your destroyer. Or face to sword, for that matter.Marchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14952331166517430843noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1149217012399643733.post-14778541265762907222015-06-21T09:51:09.280-07:002015-06-21T09:51:09.280-07:00Marc, I love how you took a potentially serious pr...Marc, I love how you took a potentially serious prompt and made it so fun and ridiculous. Even though there is only dialogue, you write it so that I can see the scene perfectly. I can even imagine to an extent what these two look like. I want to see what other conversations these two have. <br /><br />Greg, nice work! I think you've done prompts before where you began with a definition, yes? I enjoy the snarky voice of the piece and love how it somehow jumps from destroyer to Monte Python. I feel like you could write a much longer piece just like this and it'll be completely successful. <br /><br />The Destroyer:<br /><br />He came upon me with a sword of burning flame. Reds, oranges, yellows, whites blazing against the night sky, diming the world to a shade darker than black. That sword of his posed high above his head; the tendons and ligaments of his arm stood out like bits of coiled rope, ready to loosen their burden upon the world. <br />He opened his wings behind him, widening his wide set shoulders and increasing his substantial size. Those white feathers glowed an array of the warmest colors as the flames from his sword flickered over the plumed canvas. They were like the moon, reflecting fire to create their own light in the darkness.<br />There was no stopping the destruction by his hand. He let lose that flaming sword upon me, his wings snapping shut to give more power to his thrust. I didn’t stand a chance against him and his glory, his hand destined to break me. I had lost any power to stop him long ago.<br />That, indeed, was his true power, not his flaming sword or his wings of light. His eyes held all the truth in the world and through them, the ability to strip your defenses down to walls of sticks and mud. All the barricades I had built to protect my treasure were nothing when caught in his gaze. I was vulnerable.<br />And with that first look, he destroyed any chance of me being content with my isolation. And with one sweep of his sword and flap of his wings, my heart was stolen from my chest like a jewel taken from a thief in the night. <br /> Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1149217012399643733.post-5520909308482941572015-06-19T00:27:11.860-07:002015-06-19T00:27:11.860-07:00You could try counting the number of weeds left to...You could try counting the number of weeds left to eat in foreign languages. The mental effort would distract you from the physical effort and make it seem less arduous :) Or maybe you could get Max to walk along beside you taking dictation while you write your next novel?<br />Still, it sounds like you've almost won the first battle of the weed war for this year, so well done!<br />Heh, I wasn't expecting the Destroyer to be that! Although it doesn't exactly surprise me that a bodybuilder would have nicknames for his favourite muscles either, after all, he/she must spend a lot of time thinking about them and training them! The conversation flows really well and I particularly like the listener's responses; they're spot on!<br /><br /><b>The destroyer</b><br /><b>Destroyer,</b>noun, O.Du <i>de strouyer</i> via O.L<i>de schrouver</i>. The original Latin was a phrase meaning <i>of the shrubbery</i>, which were novel inventions during the first part of the Roman Conquest. Rich householders had just started the practice of taking things from far off places and transplanting them home (which would ultimately result in the British pillaging the world, putting the loot in the British Museum and trying to pass it off as history, archaeology, or self-defence according to the flavour of government when questioned), and in the event of plants the decorative (and occasionally defensive) borders that resulted were known as <i>schrouvii</i>, or shrubberies.<br />When the Flemish had gotten over their issues with tulips they turned their horticultural fervour onto shrubberies, and with an inventiveness that can only be admired they perfected what the Romans had started: the defensive shrubbery. The plants in there were thorned, barbed, poisonous, clinging and occasionally acidic and caustic, meaning that anyone unlucky enough to find themselves in a shrubbery (such as when fleeing a home because the householder had returned inopportunely, or while attempting to find ingress through a conveniently located hedge) rarely emerged and often became compost, feeding the shrubbery ready for its next engagement.<br />Rumours of mobile, fighting shrubberies, Monty Python notwithstanding, are just that.<br />From this then comes the modern English noun, destroyer, referring back to the devasting properties of those old Flemish shrubberies.<br />Greghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08503319830584828982noreply@blogger.com