Poetry
This week: Oddquain and Its Variations Edited by: Red Writing Hood <3 More Newsletters By This Editor
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One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 - 1832)
"Poetry is the exquisite expression of exquisite expressions."
Joseph Roux (1725-1793)
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Oddquain and Variations on the Oddquain
I was drawn to this poetry form by its name. The oddquain is similar to a cinquain due to its five-lined brevity, but differs in the syllable count, which is decreased by one per line from cinquain (24682) to oddquain (13571).
BRIEF HISTORY
There isn’t a lot out there about the history of this form. Only that it was created by poet Glenda L. Hand recently—most likely within the last fifty years or so. My guess it’s as soon as within the last ten or so years.
MUST HAVES
--Meter: syllabic. The pattern begins and ends with a single syllable line and runs as follows: 1, 3, 5, 7, 1.
--Five lines (with differences depending on variations).
COULD HAVES or WHAT IS THE POET’S CHOICE IN ALL THIS?
--Form is generally unrhymed, but the choice to rhyme or not is yours.
--Topic and theme are also your choice.
Oddquain variations:
Crown of oddquains: poem made of five oddquain stanzas.
Oddquain sequence: poem made of several oddquain seventeen-syllable stanzas.
Reverse oddquain: is simply an oddquain that reverses the syllable pattern and makes it 1-7-5-3-1
Mirror oddquains: a poem made of two oddquain stanzas. The first is a standard oddquain stanza and the second is a reverse oddquain stanza.
Oddquain butterfly: This takes a mirrored odquain and entwines the two stanzas into one larger stanza. However, in this merging the poet removes one of the one-syllable lines. The syllable count then becomes: 1-3-5-7-1-7-5-3-1 and the line count goes from ten (the total of the two oddquain mirror) to nine.
Oddquain Swirl: This is an oddquain that is a morphing of the oddquain by merging one or more oddquain pieces into it. The syllable and line count depends on how many swirls are in it. One swirl:1-3-5-7-5-3-1. Two swirls: 1-3-5-7-5-3-1-3-5-7-5-3-1. Three swirls: 1-3-5-7-5-3-1-3-5-7-5-3-1-3-5-7-5-3-1 and so on.
SOURCE NOTES:
http://poetscollective.org/poetryforms/oddquain/
Turco, Lewis. The Book of Forms. 3rd. Lebanon, New Hampshire: University Press of New England, 2000.
And various off-site discussion board discussions on the topic.
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Theme: Oddquain and variations.
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If so, send it through the feedback section at the bottom of this newsletter OR click the little envelope next to my name Red Writing Hood <3 and send it through email.
Comments on last month's newsletter:
From: Yellow Rose
Comment: I am so honored to have my poem in this newsletter. Such a lovely surprise. Thank you again. Yellow
You are quite welcome. I'm always happy to share well-done poetry
From: monty31802
Comment: Poetry is always a good gift in my mind. You made a good point of it. A fine N/L.
Thank you, Monty!
From: Elle - on hiatus
Comment: You spoke about gifting poems, and I've done just that this year. For Christmas I have made my mother a book of my poems. I used a relatively cheap online service that produces single copies (which I've used numerous times before for photo books) and used the cover image/title images from my portfolio here and put each poem on a different page. I didn't use every poem in my portfolio but chose the 'top 20'. I'm no expert poet, and I'm not suggesting this wee poetry book would be appropriate for anyone but my mother, but I know she'll love it, because it's me and my poetry.
Thank you for sharing how you gifted your poetry this year! I'm sure she loved it!
From: *elusive4lyn*
Comment: Thank you for always writing such encouraging information about my favorite topic~ poetry! Lyn
Awww, thank you, Lyn!
Thank you all so much for your feedback. Keep it coming!
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