Archive for the 'Informal Talk About Forms' Category
informal talk about forms: the shakespearean sonnet
7 Comments Published by Christine April 24th, 2008 in Christine, Informal Talk About Forms.Sonnet LIV.
“O! how much more doth beauty beauteous seem”
O! HOW much more doth beauty beauteous seem
By that sweet ornament which truth doth give!
The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem
For that sweet odour which doth in it live.
The canker-blooms have full as deep a dye
As the perfumed tincture of the roses,
Hang on such thorns, [...]
informal talk about forms: a brief napowrimo approach
24 Comments Published by Christine March 27th, 2008 in Christine, Informal Talk About Forms, NaPoWriMo.Here’s the long and short of it….
Can we really write thirty poems in thirty days? Yes, we can!
This past November I participated in NaBloPoMo, National Blog Posting Month. After joining Dana’s group, readwritepoem, I used the challenge of posting every day to write a poem a day. I was able to write thirty poems by [...]
informal talk about forms: the pantoum
13 Comments Published by Tom February 28th, 2008 in Informal Talk About Forms, Tom.Repetition is one of the pillars of poetry. Sometimes the repetition is of words and phrases (as in sestinas, ghazals, or villanelles), sometimes it’s a repetition of sound (rhyme, alliteration, assonance), sometimes the rhythm of the words (which we most clearly see in formal meters like iambic pentameter). All these types of repetition are used [...]
informal talk about forms: the villanelle
8 Comments Published by Tom January 24th, 2008 in Informal Talk About Forms, Tom.Without making any judgments about the value of obsession in poetry, the villanelle is an excellent vehicle for obsession. The repeated use of the refrains force the poem to keep circling and grabbing onto a very small set of ideas. This repetition is the key element of the villanelle.
Villanelle of Change
by Edwin Arlington Robinson
Since Persia [...]