If you love to write poetry and you are like me, you love to write in formal meter but are not completely comfortable with the rigidity of the meter. Yet, I bet many of you speak and write in rhythm without even realizing it. If you have ever recited Mother Goose rhymes, you recognize the swinging and swaying of the words.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary
How does your garden grow?
With silver bells and cockleshells
And pretty maids all in a row.
Which words in this nursery rhyme did you emphasize? Did a pattern emerge?
How about these lines?
I feel the nights stretching away
thousands long behind the days
till they reach the darkness where
all of me is ancestor.
Do you feel the similar swaying? “da-dum da-dum.”
This rhythm is Trochaic. A stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable. Look through your poem(s). Can you make simple alterations to make your existing poem into a Trochaic one?
For a complete guide to meter and a step-by-step guide to scanning, check out Annice Finch’s blog post.
Do send us your poems for the upcoming issue.
Thank you for your post Pratibha. It was good read your thoughts on meter. I was wondering if you plan to do any more workshops? I haven’t seen anything announced on the website. Please let me know, I would love to participate in another one. Thanks!
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Karen, thanks. Look for the workshop announcement in the new year.
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Thank you. If my schedule allows I hope to join!
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So lovely to have your ‘voice’ in my mailbox once more.
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Aww! It’s good to read your comment, Linda. I would like to be more ‘vocal’ on the blog too.
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