Arts & Humanities: Poetry: “Question: What is the difference between fixed form and metric form in poetry?” plus 5 more |
- Question: What is the difference between fixed form and metric form in poetry?
- Question: Does a sonnet have to be iambic?
- Question: What's the stress pattern of a haiku?
- Question: Stressed and unstressed syllables?
- Question: What is a good poem with a lot of rhyme and rhythm teaching 8th grade English Second Language Students to read in tone and rhyme fluently?
- Question: Can there be two words that rhyme in the last line of the first stanza of a Shakespearean sonnet?
| Question: What is the difference between fixed form and metric form in poetry? Posted: 08 Aug 2016 04:33 PM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: Does a sonnet have to be iambic? Posted: 08 Aug 2016 03:44 PM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: What's the stress pattern of a haiku? Posted: 08 Aug 2016 03:38 PM PDT Can it be the following: da da DA da DA OR da da DA da DA Also, can a haiku cintaintain more than one stanza (5-7-5) or dies that make it a sort of free verse? |
| Question: Stressed and unstressed syllables? Posted: 08 Aug 2016 03:08 PM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Posted: 08 Aug 2016 05:02 AM PDT To Speak of Love Awed in all it's splendor What of this crazy thing called love It can come and go within a day A masterpiece of perfection love Love may be only a demonstration When the blind can see love The bond of love with it's serene ability So go ahead and speak to the love for author - myself Daryl R. written around 1972 for my girlfriend now |
| Posted: 08 Aug 2016 02:11 AM PDT Yes, it can. It's not precluded. Such a rhyme is called an internal rhyme. One thing a Shakespearean sonnet, however, can't do without is iambic pentameter. Your example is not written in iambic verse. While each line has ten syllables, the emphasis of the syllables does not naturally fall every other syllable with emphasis starting on the second syllable of each line. i CALL out TO sea TO eCHO my SOUL, That isn't how people talk. For example, in an infinitive, nobody would ever put emphasis on the word "to" rather than the main verb. "to BE or NOT to BE?" that IS the QUEStion to SLEEP, perCHANCE to DREAM – ay, THERE'S the RUB. Shakespeare always put the emphasis on the main verb, not the "to" that introduced the infinitive. By the way, in case you're wondering why Shakespeare in the first of the two lines above has eleven syllables instead of ten, it's because of the female ending – the last syllable of the line not having emphasis. Anyway, just read through the stanza as I wrote it putting emphasis on the words in all caps. Doing so, you should be able to hear immediately that you don't have the verse right. |
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