3/28/2024 0 Comments Norton ghost 11 screencap![]() ![]() stanzas basically like Percey Bysshe Shelley's “Ode to the West Wind” sonnet sections but without the terza rima rhyme. A total of 30 words for the whole poem, then. This means that each stanza, in whatever shape, contains six words. Four hay(na)ku, adding up to twelve lines, and then a couplet of three words per line, each equivalent to the third line of a hay(na)ku. In fact, I think I've invented the hay(na)ku sonnet. Once again, I’ve been an overachiever and mashed up all three prompts, though I only manage to mention my favorite candies. Her sprightly example celebrates Gummi Bears. In today’s prompt for her “April Writing Challenge 2012,” Andrea Boltwood suggests an ode to a favorite candy. Check out Robert’s cool sample poem, which mixes doomsday with tax day. Maureen Thorson says, “because it’s the 14th, I challenge you to write a sonnet.” Robert Lee Brewer tells us: write a doomsday poem. almost halfway through National Poetry Month. ![]()
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