Your comment reminded me of some of D.H. Lawrence's works, where he would often repeat a word or phrase within a sentence, or within a paragraph, or use a variation of a word or phrase a paragraph or two later. Him being a poet as well might have been a part of that. The 50-word/200-word constraint might lend itself to some poetic tropes, though Lawrence used those methods in full novels.
Your comment reminded me of some of D.H. Lawrence's works, where he would often repeat a word or phrase within a sentence, or within a paragraph, or use a variation of a word or phrase a paragraph or two later. Him being a poet as well might have been a part of that. The 50-word/200-word constraint might lend itself to some poetic tropes, though Lawrence used those methods in full novels.
Your comment reminded me of some of D.H. Lawrence's works, where he would often repeat a word or phrase within a sentence, or within a paragraph, or use a variation of a word or phrase a paragraph or two later. Him being a poet as well might have been a part of that. The 50-word/200-word constraint might lend itself to some poetic tropes, though Lawrence used those methods in full novels.