As
I had hinted to earlier this month, this month of October marks one year
anniversary since Echoes of the Hills first echoed. Over the past one year, the
echoes have been mostly in Free Verse. Pilgrims to the hills have had very few
choices as you can tell.
Last month, Echoes of the Hills echoed haiku in the
Heights of Haiku Challenge (This is one of the mountains where the hills can
replenish their echoes). Yesterday, Echoes of the Hills (perhaps in one of the
unprecedented moves in the whole of ‘hilldom’) echoed the first etheree. And
there is more from the caves where that came from.
In
the spirit of growing from a first year old to a second year old, Echoes of the
Hills intends to explore various forms of poetry as never witnessed before. There
will be a break to the Free Verse to explore such diverse poetry forms such as
pantoums, sestina, limerick, epigram,
ghazal and so on. The list will be as random as the hills will choose to.
The
hills ( And O, that is not a personification, the hills can do some of these
things) have been studying various forms of poetry and you can only sit by and wait
to listen to the secrets of the hills.
As
a start, let us try a pantoum. This poetic form from Malaysia, one can tell,
has the following structure:
1
2 3 4- Lines in first quatrain
2
5 4 6- Lines in second quatrain
5
7 6 8- Lines in third quatrain
7
9 8 10- Lines in fourth quatrain
9
3 10 1- Lines in fifth and final quatrain
However,
there are complex structures which combine a rhyme scheme and repetition. For
example,
Assuming
the following poem below is a quatrain, then it will appear as follows:
First stanza 1
2
3
4
Second stanza 2
5
4
6
Third stanza 5
7
6
8
Fourth stanza 7
3
8
1
Please
note that the numbers above designate the lines and not the syllables. You will
note that it is not like the normal pantoum which has the second stanza and
subsequent ones have the second line starting out in the subsequent stanza. In
addition to that, the second form of pantoum has the last line of the first
stanza being repeated in the third line of the quatrain.
This
is what The Echoes of the Hills can discern so far of the quatrain. Still learning
about its intricacies.
So,
here we go.
My
heart is shaped as a quill (1)
A
smudged ink of what events write (2)
Like
a hermit, keen to listen to the hill (3)
We
are such, blotted characters in fright (4)
A
smudged ink of what events write (2)
Forming
the rich tapestry of life (5)
We
are such, blotted characters in fright (4)
Oft
times, we tone anger when things are rife (6)
Forming
the rich tapestry of life (5)
We
worry not of mankind’s cold gaze(7)
Oft
times, we tone anger when things are rife (6)
On
mankind’s conscience, we run the maze (8)
We
worry not of mankind’s cold gaze (7)
We
write what we feel, we feel what we write (8)
On
mankind’s conscience, we run the maze (8)
My
heart is shaped as a quill. (1)
4 comments:
Oh very well done pantoum! I love what you wrote about, too, humorous as always. I am tuned to receive the hill's teachings......write on, grandson!
Salem, I'm not one for structured forms, mainly because I don't have the patience for disciplining myself so, but you have done a great job with this, and like Sherry, I look forward to your future teachings.
Thank you a lot. I also find it slow and restricting. But I want to experience the challenge and learn of the forms. I find it to be educative to try and apply the knowledge in one or two examples. But like you, I love Free Verse and other 'untaxing' forms.
Always appreciative, Koko. Let us embark on this journey and see where it leads us to. There is more from the caves. Of that have not doubt.
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Echoes of the Hills is all about you. I would love to hear your echo...