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Showing posts with label 4 quatrains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4 quatrains. Show all posts

Monday, January 21, 2013

Quadrilew


Created by C. G. V. Lewis, the Quadrilew is a form of quatrain poem
 with an abab rhyming scheme, repeating lines, and contains an alternating syllable structure.

.

This is a stanzaic, form requiring 4 quatrains.
It is syllabic with two forms, either 5/6/5/6  repeating or 6/5/6/5 repeating.
Minimum 16 lines, No meter specified.
Refrains: The Nth line of the first quatrain is the first line of the Nth quatrain.

In the first verse, the poet may either start with a five or six syllable line.
The poem requires FOUR quatrains

Rhyme pattern: aBAB2 Baba Abab B2aba, when the capitalized letters represent the three refrain lines.



VERSE ONE,
Line 1, 5 syllables.
Line 2, 6 syllables.
Line 3, 5 syllables.
Line 4, 6 syllables.

VERSE TWO,
Line 1, (which is a REPEAT of line 2 of the FIRST verse) has 6 syllables.
Line 2 new line of 5 syllables
Line 3 new line of 6 syllables
Line 4 new line of 5 syllables.

VERSE THREE,
Line 1, (which is a REPEAT of line 3 of the first verse) has 5 syllables.
Line 2 new line of 6 syllables.
Line 3 new line of 5 syllables.
Line 4 new line of 6 syllables.

VERSE FOUR,
Line 1, (which is a REPEAT of line 4 of the first verse) has 6 syllables.
Line 2 new line of 5 syllables.
Line 3 new line of 6 syllables.
Line 4 new line of 5 syllables.

If the first line of verse one has 6 syllables then the pattern is
Verse 1, 6565,
Verse 2, 5656,
Verse 3, 6565,
Verse 4 5656: (the rhyme pattern still being abab.)

If wishing to create a longer poem then the next verse (5)
must be a completely fresh set of four lines,
these being used as before in the following three verses.

Example Poem

My Goat   (Quadrilew)















My goat can't pedal yet.
My goat likes to ride
when we go to the vet.
He likes apples fried.

My goat likes to ride
buses, trains, and , you bet
cars-- on the inside!
(He don't like gettin' wet. )

When we go to the vet
He climbs up astride
my back and that's no sweat.
my goat's satisfied.

He likes apples fried
if appetite's been whet.
Laughs he will provide,
he's more a friend than pet.

© Lawrencealot - Janyary 20,2016





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This is the 5/6 option


















This is th 6/5 option

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Tempo Composto


Tempo Composto means "time's up" in Latin.

A form invented by L. Allen Bacon, aka Allen a Dale

The first three stanzas of a “tempo composto” are made up of
1) A Spondee (DA-DA)
2) two lines of Dactyl (DA-da-da)
3) 12 syllables free verse.

The fourth stanza differs in that the final line is only
4 syllables of free verse.

The rhyme pattern is
a-a-x-x
b-b-x-x
c-c-x-x
d-d-x-x

Looks good centered, but that is not a requirement.

Example Poem


Ride in the Country

Roadside
countryside
Lemonade
For sale sign draws me in to find they have just corn. 

Quite hot!
Day is shot.
I have got
no lemonade. Drive on looking for the next stand.

Need gas,
Still I pass
twenty-one
stations looking for fruit stand, then run out of gas.

Walk back!
Station sez,
Out of gas,
Got lemonade.

(c) Lawrencealot - May 30, 2012

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