Types of Poetry
Acrostic Poetry:
In Acrostic poems, the first letters of each line are aligned vertically to form a word. The word often is the subject of the poem.
Example:
Loves to play on the computer
Always humorous
Unique in every way
Running, jumping, tumbling at gym
Exceptionally bright
Learner
Cinquain Poetry:
Cinquain poems are five lines long with a certain number of syllables or words in each. Cinquain poems do not rhyme. There are many ways to write cinquain poems. Here is an example of one cinquain pattern.
Line 1: Title - one word or two syllablesLine 2: Description or example of the title - 2 words or four syllables
Line 3: Action about the title - a 3 word phrase or six syllables
Line 4: a 4 word phrase describing a feeling about the title or 8 syllables
Line 5: Synonym for the title - one word - 2 syllables
Line 1: Panther
Line 2: Sleek, graceful
Line 3: Running, hiding, emerging
Line 4: Happy to be free
Line 5: Cat
Line 3: Running, hiding, emerging
Line 4: Happy to be free
Line 5: Cat
Couplets:
The couplet is the easiest of the verse forms. It consists of two lines with an end rhyme.
Example:
Grandmother sits in her old rocking chair.
She rocks and she rocks all day there.
Diamante:
Diamante poems are easy poems to write. You need to think of a subject and its opposite and then follow the format listed below:
First line: one word (subject).
Second line: two adjectives describing the subject
Third line: three words ending in -ing telling about the subject
Fourth line: four words, the first two describe the subject and the last two describe its opposite
Fifth line: three words ending in -ing telling about the opposite
Sixth line: two adjectives describing the opposite
Seventh line: one word (opposite from the first line)
Haiku:
A form of centuries old Japanese poetry that consists of seventeen syllables and has nature as its subject or theme. Haiku is very short and has a 5-7-5 syllable structure with 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second line, and 5 syllables in the third line. With just a couple of words, haiku poetry conveys emotion. It suggests that the reader look and listen to the world.
Example:
As I lay and gaze
Blue skies and white clouds
Billowing high above me
Blue skies and white clouds
Billowing high above me
Tanka:
Tanka is another form of Japanese poetry that consists of 31 syllables (5-7-5-7-7). The themes for Tanka are love, nature, seasons, and friendships,
Here is an example of Tanka:
Wind
Wind blowing my face
Making my cheeks rosy red
It's biting my nose
And chilling through all my bones
It is pushing me along
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