OTTAVA RIMA FORM
An Ottava Rima originates as an Italian poem made up of eight lines with the rhyme pattern ab/ab/ab/cc. First introduced by Sir Thomas Wyatt in the late 13th to early 14th century. Each line consists of eleven syllables.
CHANGE OF SEASON
Wicked Winter strives to retain its powers
and prove itself the mightiest of season
With biting winds that chill the spring's first showers
But gentle Spring does nudge our nature's reason
Her warm invite provokes to wake the flowers
and smiles her sunshine bringing birds and bees on
Finally Winter yields its hold and passes
applauded by the flowers trees and grasses
CLERIHEW FORM
A Clerihew is an English poem invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley around 1890 at the age of 16. It is presented in two couplets, the first and second lines rhyme with each other, and the third and fourth lines rhyme with each other (aa/bb). The first line ends with the name of a well known person or character, and the second line ends with something that rhymes with that name. A clerihew should be whimsical.
JOHN WAYNE
I offered a drink to a tired John Wayne
He had recently arrived here in town on a train
Someone told him "You're old and can't cowboy no more"
and with one solid move was laid out on the floor
DOLLY PARTON
The show featured songs sung by great Dolly Parton
In the audience cheering and lighters were startin'
But one guest was obviously drunken and lewd
Escorted out while the audience and star loudly booed
FREE VERSE
Free Verse: A type of poetry with no strict meter or rhyme, yet are recognizable as poetry by the writer's expression, style or use of literary tools such as alliteration, cadence or rhythm.
Morning Hike
The first wisps of morning
peek through faded edges
of my kitchen curtains.
I pull laces tight
on my heavy shoes
and summon my partner
who I find waiting
already at the door.
She dances impatiently
as I attach the leash.
In minutes we are on the road
that winds past my winter worn yard.
Where the blacktop ends,
my life begins.
My footsteps become brisker
my lungs feel renewed
taking in the crisp,
fresh air sweeping from the river
across the tall dry grasses
waving their greeting.
Here I free my joyful dog
to romp and bury her nose
in the layers of leaf
and weed residue.
Her playfulness inspires me.
I laugh and run
as she quickly chases
slyly staying
just out of my reach.
Our progress slows
as we near the river.
I watch the rippling,
burbling water.
Though unseen, I hear
the call of loons
and songbirds trilling
their songs to intimate mates.
We sit together in the sand briefly,
until she ventures out
on her own private exploration.
I allow my daydreams to wander
as the sky puts on a slideshow
of misshapen images.
Reluctantly, my companion
joins me as I turn back
to erase the lighthearted imprints
of my previous footsteps.
Season Change
In a cafe booth
I watch a young mother
cooing to her newborn
with a rather
disheartening realization
that I do not feel
the yearning I used to
to hold my new baby in my arms.
I must have passed through
some portal of age
where time
gently took from me
that maternal yen
and paid me for it
with gray hair
and aching bones.
Then I hear
in that melancholy moment
the chirping voices
of my grandchildren
who shout out greetings
when they see me
and I understand
a little better
the subtle exchanges
our creator designed
and thank him silently
amid hugs and menus.
When A Poet Passes
A book
poised
under soft light
of a Noachian lamp
displayed on a heavy oak desk
Words
brought from mortality
Every rhyme
each iamb
bound by ethereal hands
to bide in harmony
with aged rune
A jacket of brown leather
oiled by placid hands
Pages curled
by pencil calloused fingertips
preserved now for all of time
in heaven’s ambry
Out My Window
One soft maple
towers at the edge of a travel-worn circle drive
surrounded by Chinese elm bushes with lush new hairdos.
A long strip of cultivated earth
contains yellow iris
and soon-to-bloom tiger lilies
working hard to cast out the tenacious, unwelcome blades of grass.
Two recently pruned apple trees,
stand like islands in the grass circle
still fresh with memories
of their gay pink and white adornment
only days ago.
Beyond the circle
lies a winding dead end road
bordered by budding coneflowers
and freckled white Queen Anne's Lace.
.An occasional robin or yellow finch
unknowingly performs for us,
or a squirrel ceases his roam and flashes his tail
at the tap of this window pane,
while I absently search for inspiration
to write of something beautiful
Delusional March
Golden tendrils
from an almost risen sun
paint a widening promise
across the river valley.
The rocky southwestern shoreline
seems to raise
its face
to the radiant presence.
Burbling, impatient water,
though,
casts off the feigned warmth,
wittingly aware
of the whipping wind
sustaining winter's
confident grip.
It swallows,
crossly,
the mendacious beams
that flaunt a shimmering beauty
and carries them downstream
depositing them here and there
between the lapping ripples.
Once Again
Once again
the solemn faces greet me
as I walk
the ponderous stretch to the coffin.
Paying last respects is monstrous;
making one feel helplessly vulnerable,
inadequate.
All of my being aches
for the anguish and sorrow
hovering like ghastly cologne;
unable to be vanquished with words
or embrace.
My age weighs heavy
knowing
I am nearer to tear stained faces of mourners
over my still body
than I care to admit.
Mortality wields a herculean fist
that reflects
from the shiny new casket
and glossy leaves of surrounding bouquets.
With flashes of envy,
I see the youngest eyes,
filled with question and wonder
at the unnatural behavior of loved ones
and strangers;
sensing that something sinister and unspeakable
exists amidst them.
In the silenced room, words are spoken,
music permeates.
My soul is pierced by sobs
repressed
through tissue wrapped fingers
and grief- stricken shudders..
Gravediggers
waiting at the edge of the cemetery
to finish their task,
evoke a sense of resentment
at their callous disinterest
in the proceedings where I stand.
Once again
the cars leave
in much less formation than they arrived.
People stand talking in small groups
around cold headstones.
My shoes
carry away freshly exposed earth
that once gave life
to the lush green grass
of this final resting place.
Tears
The tall white
taper in the
lower sconce trembled
as the door
closed like
it was waving
goodbye As if frozen
I watched the hot
wax tears rolling
downward
silently
thanking it for
making the necessary
motions
Ageless
He doesn’t know
what pose he offers.
My eyes
upon the bent and wrinkled lyrist
echo back to me
my intrusion.
His limp arms
sway slightly as he shuffles
to his accustomed park bench
His fingers delineate
beauty like that he has created
even through their dull arthritic ache.
He opens a baggie
and tosses crumbs to his favored
companions.
TYBURN FORM
A Tyburn Poem is a six-line poetic form where the first four lines consist of just a single, two syllable word each, that all rhyme. Line 5 has nine syllables, with the fifth to eighth syllables using the words from lines 1 and 2 plus a one syllable word to further describe the image. Line 6 also has nine syllables, with the fifth to eighth syllables using the words from lines 3 and 4 plus another one syllable word rhyming with the final word in Line 5 to sew the image together.
Cloudburst
Shaking
Quaking
Waking
Breaking
Earth in tremor shaking, quaking loud
the skies command waking, breaking cloud
Winter
Easy
Breezy
Sneezy
Wheezy
Wind through my door easy, breezy bold
Wrapped in layers sneezy, wheezy cold
PB&J
Punky
Chunky
Funky
Spunky
Shell the peanuts punky, chunky roast
Grind till creamy funky, spunky toast
Injury
Sobbing
Throbbing
Hobbling
Wobbling
Smashed my toenail sobbing, throbbing OW!
Need for crutches hobbling, wobbling now
Shower
whirly twirly
curly squirrely
breezes frolicking whirly twirly play
rain on window panes curly squirrely spray
HAIKU
Haiku is a traditional Japanese three-line poem with seventeen syllables, divided in lines with 5/7/5 syllable pattern. Haiku generally focus on images from nature. Often untitled, it is a striking feature of the haiku that direct discussion of the poem's implications is forbidden. Sometimes writers of this form take leeway by a syllable or two either way and even transform other variables, such as reverse haiku 7/5/7.
Touch
tender bud blossoms
cloistered in satin and lace
neath a virile thumb
REVERSE HAIKU
Early Spring
may apples huddle in groups
morel mushroom shade
beneath an elm umbrella
DECIMA FORM
The decima of Puerto Rico is a style of poetry that is octosyllabic and has 10 lines to the stanza. The rhyming scheme is ABBAACCDDC. It is spoken, sung and written throughout Latin America with variations in different countries. A person who writes or improvises décima is known as a decimista or decimero.
Good Intentions
I wish to rid this world of stress
make everyone a happy soul
to ease all pain; maintain control
provide all people food and dress
to turn sadness to happiness
I wish for this with all my heart
Try as I may I cannot start
For I am only one, you see
My own emotions hinder me
until I can't tell them apart
LIMERICKS
Limerick: A popular form in children’s verse, the limerick is often comical, nonsensical, and sometimes even lewd. Composed of five lines, the limerick adheres to a strict rhyme scheme and bouncy rhythm, making it easy to memorize. Typically, the first two lines rhyme with each other, the third and fourth rhyme together, and the fifth line either repeats the first line or rhymes with it. The stress pattern is 1.) - / - - / - - / 2.) - / - - / - - / 3.) - / - - / 4.) - / - - / 5.) - / - - / - - /
Apple to Apple Limerick
Green apple said to the red
I love that cute stem on your head
I wish it were mine
it would make me look fine
but mine is unsightly instead
Timidly Yellow spoke up
I'm a humble and petrified pup
Your colors are scary
I have to be wary
I'm afraid I'll end up in a cup
Red, who was fancy and proud
spoke unnecessarily loud
I know I'm the best
and he pumped out his breast
trying to prove he was aptly endowed
Then bi-color started to speak
in a tone neither haughty nor meek
pride, fear or browbeaten
We all will be eaten
there are none of us grossly unique
CINDERFELLA
In a quaint little fairy tale city
Lived a cinder-faced boy and his kitty
His stepfather beat him
his stepbrothers would cheat him
without even one ounce of pity
Every day was the same as the last
warned to finish his household chores fast
so he washed and he mopped
and never once stopped
till the hours of daylight had passed
After scrounging for something to eat
the boy and his cat would retreat
to his space in the attic
which was never traumatic
peeking down at the cobblestone street
One particular night as he spied
he saw danger and loudly he cried
"Get out of the way!"
as a single horse sleigh
and an old man did nearly collide
The old man was grateful indeed
that he'd escaped the horrific stampede
He said to the boy
I will gladly employ
anything that you think you might need
The little lad humble and kind
shook his head as he smiled and declined
I simply ask that
your gift go to my cat
that is of course, if you don't mind
Thus the cat and the old man conversed
and from that day the boy's life reversed
He was not reprimanded
No longer commanded
for his dad and stepbrothers were cursed
For a wizard was strolling one night
when a horse and sleigh gave him a fright
He was alerted in time
by a boy, face of grime
who thought more of his cat than his plight
So a moral comes out of this tale
that if hard work and kindness prevail
There may come a day
that your actions will pay
so upon your cat highly regale
CINQUAIN
A Cinquain is poetry with five lines. Line 1 has one word (the title). Line 2 has two words that describe the title. Line 3 has three words that tell the action. Line 4 has four words that express the feeling, and line 5 has one word which recalls the title in another word
(often metaphorically)
Bats
winged mammals
hunting flying swooping
seems they're after me
vampires
Fingers
human appendages
pointing snapping tapping
defines sense of touch
Feelers
Wedding
joyful event
marching singing uniting
two become as one
promise
Dog
faithful comrade
sniffing barking romping
piece of my heart
friend
GLOSA
Glosa: In its strict form it is a poem consisting of a line or a short stanza called cabeza (or texto), stating the theme of the poem and followed by one stanza for each line of the cabeza explaining or glossing that line and often adding a refrain as the first or last line, or both. The cabeza may be any length or rhyme scheme and the poet is free to choose any other form.
Aromas from the kitchen beckon me
Its hard to wait for dinner patiently
My mother blends her spices perfectly
Like peppermint or cinnamon in tea
Mouthwatering I'm sure you will agree
Aromas from the kitchen beckon me
But Mom I know, won't listen to my plea
one teeny sip would set my taste buds free
no one I know is resolute as she
Its hard to wait for dinner patiently
HAVEN
A bed of needles lay beneath the pine
The haven was a special place of mine
Closely planted trees on hill's incline
denied admssion to the hot sunshine
Yet warm and dry provided safe confine
A bed of needles lay beneath the pine
No better place had I to take recline
Time spent there in childhood design
Low branches tucked aside with wisps of twine
The haven was a special place of mine
TANKA
Tanka: (also called uta or waka) is an unrhymed thirty-one-syllable poem, traditionally written in a single unbroken line in five-line, 5/7/5/7/7 syllable count form. The tanka employs a turn, known as a pivotal image, which marks the transition from the examination of an image to the examination of the personal response. This turn is located within the third line,connecting the upper poem, with the lower poem.
Fragile silver lace
daintily spans the corner
beneath the stair step
like strings of my heart trembling
when I see you cry
A young October
on an enchanting hayride
his hand takes hers
as it had some years before
beginning life together