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Thread: Are there any poets out there?

  1. #121
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    I've decided to write a short ditty,
    About famous old Manchester City,
    Now we're down to the nitty and gritty,
    And despite all the cash in the kitty,
    No title and to some that's a pity,
    Grown men in blue crying,that's not pretty.
    "Music is the best means we have of digesting time".

    W. H. Auden

  2. #122
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    My contribution to this thread, despite having foolishly revealed a link to my own verse, didn't get much favour.

    So a challenge: let's see some poems in the forms I've tried, but better, much better.

    1) Free verse with a general structure and a complex set of allusions and references.

    2) Syllabic verse (possibly the 5-7-5 structure that is erroneously named after the rather more subtle Japanese Haiku) with internal rhymes (possibly the "a a b b a" of the limerick).

    3) The traditional sonnet form used to paraphrase verse in other languages.

    4) Terza rima with octosyllabic lines and simple rhyme words, without proper nouns.

    5) Other strict forms, such as ballades, or rhymed stanzas with an "a b c b a b c" pattern.

  3. #123
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    Your Matter of Britain poem also reminded me of the englyn (association ideas, I mean) - another poetic challenge to do properly. (I studied early Welsh poetry and once understood the earliest existing ones: I don't think I would now)

  4. #124
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    Well, I can do triolets, more or less. These are years old.

    When Cupid with his darts
    Had still to be invented,
    The world knew not Love's smarts
    When Cupid with his darts
    Aimed not at people's hearts.
    They must have been contented
    When Cupid with his darts
    Had still to be invented.

    OR

    Time's thief, Procrastination
    Will not let me write.
    I'm filled with desperation!
    Time's thief, Procrastination
    May send me inspiration
    Sometime - but tonight
    Time's thief, Procrastination
    Will not let me write.

  5. #125
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    Well done Mary. I don't think I'll be trying any of those forms. Doggerel was more my mark.

  6. #126
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mary Chambers View Post
    Well, I can do triolets, more or less. These are years old.

    When Cupid with his darts
    Had still to be invented,
    The world knew not Love's smarts
    When Cupid with his darts
    Aimed not at people's hearts.
    They must have been contented
    When Cupid with his darts
    Had still to be invented.

    OR

    Time's thief, Procrastination
    Will not let me write.
    I'm filled with desperation!
    Time's thief, Procrastination
    May send me inspiration
    Sometime - but tonight
    Time's thief, Procrastination
    Will not let me write.


    Or are you an woman, Mary?

  7. #127
    Hornspieler Guest

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    There was an old man from Milan
    Whose limericks never would scan
    When told this was so
    He replied "Yes,I know,
    But the trouble is that I like to get as many long and complicated words into the last line as I possibly can"

    HS

  8. #128
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    Dec 2011
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    Quote Originally Posted by salymap View Post
    Well done Mary. I don't think I'll be trying any of those forms. Doggerel was more my mark.
    Have you a bank of it? I've got say though I put the odd rhyme together it's usually spontaneously thrown together avoiding the theory!

  9. #129
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    Quote Originally Posted by John Bennett View Post
    The "scansion" rhymes reminded me of:

    For a limerick's built like a mansion
    Word by word with most careful expansion
    The rhymes must display
    A A B B A
    But the crucial component is scansion."
    Non-rhyme also works:

    There was an old man of Tralee
    Who was stung in the neck by a wasp
    When asked, "Does it hurt?"
    He replied, "Not a bit!
    It can do it again if it likes

  10. #130
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    I think fitting words into a form is good fun. Has anyone read Stephen Fry's book on the subject, The Ode Less Travelled: Unlocking the Poet Within?

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