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Workshops
If you
like a challenge, try your hand at one of
the poetic forms below.
Tanka
In
this
workshop, put together a tanka using a simile, about either the sky or the
sea.
Read
Workshop

Echo
Verse
A poem in which the last syllable or two of a main line is repeated, perhaps with different spelling or meaning, as if an
echo.
Read
Workshop

Petrarchan
Sonnet
Also
known as the
Italian
sonnet,
originated
in Italy in
the 13th
Century and
was
associated
with the
Italian poet
Petrarch.
Read
Workshop

Pantoum
Renowned
as one of
the
classic
forms of
poetry.
Despite
its
somewhat
strict
structure,
the
pantoum is
still a
versatile
poetic
form.
Read
Workshop

Cinquain
Formed
by
American
poet
Adelaide
Crapsey
around
1909-1910,
cinquains
are a form
of English
haiku.
Read
Workshop

Triolet
The
triolet
(pronounced
tree-o-lay)
originated
in France
in the
13th
Century
and is
usually
short and
witty.
However,
some of
the first
English
triolets
were
essentially
spiritual.
Read
Workshop

Limerick
Speculated
to have been
invented by
soldiers
returning
from France
to the Irish
town of
Limerick in
the 1700s,
the sign of
a good
limerick is
the last
line where
the punch
line or
heart of the
joke lies.
Read
Workshop

Ballad
The ballad first
began as a song that tells a story to
the listener. Circulated as songs,
this would then be passed onto
generation after generation in its
musical form.
Read Workshop
Sonnet
More
sophisticated than your average rhyming
poetry, the sonnet is sometimes considered
to be the most accessible of classic
forms.
Read Workshop
Rondeau
French
lyrical poem, originally developed as
medieval courtly music, the rondeau also
has some interesting derivatives.
Read Workshop
Kyrielle
A
French medieval form, characterised by
frequent repetition, as in a refrain... an
excellent addition to your poetic
craft.
Read Workshop 
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