I really am going to be traveling until the end of the month. I will continue to write a poem a day, but I don't know about the internet availability, so I may miss posting daily. And, in spite of the tone of this poem I'm really excited about this trip to the UK where I will get to meet up with a few writing friends! :o)
Aprille has us trying our hand at dactyls over at IGwRT. A dactyl has three feet, [dah -de-de ]
whereas the iamb [ de-dah] has only two. Obviously, the double dactyl has two dactyls. The verse form by that name usually consists of two stanzas often with
the name of a person in it. I played a bit fast and loose with the form, but here is Aprile's easy way to count the syllables, and
indicate where the stress should be:
ONE two three ONE two three
ONE two three ONE two three
ONE two three ONE two three
ONE two three DONE
Marian has a form prompt today at IGwRT. It's a Roundel, which is an eleven-line, three
stanza poem with a refrain and this rhyme scheme: ABAR BAB ABAR
(R = refrain). It has ten syllable per line, with the
refrain consisting of six syllables. The refrain is intended to come from the
beginning of the first line. Also posted at NaPoWriMo.
Valencian
fiesta an orange grove byJoaquin
Sorolla y Batisda
This is a combination of prompts, with the first image from Tess at The Mag and the second image and the fom from Joy at IGwRt and it is also linked to NaPoWriMo Day 14. The form is calleds Interlocking Rhyme and is described by Lewis Turco in Book of Forms as:
"Linked rhyme (or chained rhyme) chimes the
laSpst syllable or syllables of a line with the first syllable or syllables of
the next line…"
My daughter's birthday is the 14 of this month, and she graduates the 18th of next month. I suppose this has something to do with my dream...
The form is a Tanka, which is a
poem based on syllables, with the pattern being 5-7-5-7-7. They work best when
those final two 7-syllable lines contain a sort of turn or surprise that the
first three lines might not wholly anticipate. This prompt is from NaPoWriMo Day 11.
This is a form called an Octain, created by Luke Prater which has a rhyme pattern of A-b-b-a-c/c-a-b-A with each line in iambic tetrameter. It's linked to IGwRT Open Link Monday and NaPoWriMo Day #8.
Here is a loosely configured (and thought out) Limerick for day 6 of NaPoWriMo using the prompt of 'outside' (almost) given by Peggy at IGwRT. :o) Disclaimer: this is a piece of creative writing, and any resemblance to real belly buttons is purely coincidental. :o)
This is for G-man's FF55 at the eleventh hour! And I learned about the muscian/activist/visionary Rodrigues from the Real Toads. (And I changed the title after listening to a song that Kerry suggested - so the title now is also a title of a song by Rodriguez that can be found here I Think of You. Thanks to Kerry at Skylover!
Here is my offering for NaPoWriMo Day #5. This form is a Cinquain, which consistes 5 lines with the following syllables per line: 2-4-6-8-2. Check out the link for a more complete explanation, and lots of great examples of the form.
that coming to the land
was another Wal-Mart
and it would mark the beginning
of an Irregular Apocalypse.
And the people were sore afraid.
And there was much wailing and gnashing of teeth
and taking of Xanax,
and also some hallucinogens.
And the people had Visions.
In the Visions the people saw a man
seated on the throne with a Book
with seven seals.
And the seals did balance balls on their noses, and
throw the balls to one another
and to the Plasticine women.
Then out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and
brimstone,
because they had eaten Mexican food for dinner.
Then the people did behold seven horn players
who did wail on their instruments and
play a mighty dirge.
And Elton John did play his piano and sing.
And he sang unto all the peoples of the Earth:
With all
these things that I've done
While
everyone's lost, the battle is won.
This is for NaPoWriMo Day #4, from the apocalyse Southland Tales prompt from IGwRT and the Ian Banks prompt at NaPoWriMo. And it's with apologies to The Killers and King James, Elton John and anyone else I may have offended along the way.
This is for NaPoWritMo, and is driving me crazy. I think the cadence drifted a bit, but I'm running out of day #3! And I guess I'm linking it to nowhere - so please look for it on Facebook and Google+
disillusioned lullaby. This form is called a Triolet which is eight lines with a rhyme scheme of ABaAabAB. The meter is generally iambic tetrameter or pentameter, but I've played a bit fast and loose with this. This is for day #2 of NaPoWriMo and is linked to dVerse Poets Pub Open Link Night.
And most assuredly God would have a cat in Her
kitchen.
And rows and rows of pots and crocks and jars
filled with
darkness and light and creeping things,
and baskets of stars,
and bushels of peaches,
and a huge stoppered bottle
full of annoying people,
and another with mosquitoes
and large bin of dinosaurs and sea monsters
all mixed up together.
Then She
created the Earth and saw that it was good.
But She knew She could do better…
particularly if She went easier on
the obnoxious
people and the mosquitoes;
so She keeps trying.
And in spite of Genesis,
I think God spends
every Sunday afternoon
cooking up new worlds.
So that's where She can be found,
in Her wonderfully cluttered kitchen.
And by the way, you’re always welcome in
for a chat and a cuppa.’
For the Writing prompt offered by The Mag. Also posted at Imaginary Garden with Real Toads Open Link Night. They are doing a prompt a day for April, National Poetry Month.