Poetry Forms Easily Explained - a work of Bianca with additions by kansaspoet
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To me, a new form to play with, but in fact it is an old Irish poetry form. Guidelines: It is written in quatrains. Each stanza has four lines. The first line has five syllables. The other three lines have six syllables. All end words are two syllables. But - written with the defining features of most Celtic poems, cywddydd (harmony of sound) meaning alliteration, consonance and assonance and dunadh (ending the poem with the same word, phrase or line with which the poem began) Challenging. An example: tattle, by Robert Lee Brewer Go, tell your father that you saw your mother being quite a bother to your older brother down by the river where there is a sliver of an uncooked liver that prompted a shiver before some shaking without any faking of news you were breaking about their scene making. My try: Outside it's snowing one rare, cold wind blowing people stuck and freezing wouldn't trade for anything. Sources: https://poetscollective.org/poetryforms/breccbairdne/ https://www.writersdigest.com/poetic-asides/breccbairdne-poetic-forms Poem ©Bianca Boonstra - 2022 |