Fifteen Minutes Of Fiction Writing Gallery

Anapestic Tetrameter: Anapestic Tetrameter is a common form of poetry which has four anapests per line, and typically rhymes pairs of adjacent lines.
Posted by Douglas, Sep 14, 2010.
 
  Home   My Page   My Neighbors   Gallery   Writers   Articles   Forum   Login  

 


Anapestic Tetrameter

Posted by Douglas, Sep 14, 2010.
Filed in : Articles : Poetry


When people write iambic poetry, the most common form has 5 iambs per line, making it iambic pentameter. When writing anapestic poetry, however, it very common to have 4 anapests per line, making it anapestic tetrameter.

When writing anapestic tetrameter, it is common to write pairs of adjacent lines so they rhyme.

The following is an example of a poem in anapestic tetrameter:

After the Festivities
When the sparklers have sparked and the cannons have boomed,
And the flags have been flown and the flowers have bloomed,
When the coleslaw arrives and the meat has been grilled,
And the children have played and the bellies are filled,
When the families have left after long, fond good-byes,
And the tables are cleared, we sit back with a sigh,
Then we doze and digest with a satisfied smile,
And with fondness remember the day for awhile;
But perhaps in the midst of the party and fun,
We've lost sight of the way that our freedom was won;
Let us never forget the great war that was fought,
And the price for our freedom, in blood dearly bought -
For the wisest of Men said that Truth sets you free,
And to let freedom ring, Truth was nailed to a tree.

(Copyright 2010 by Douglas Twitchell)

See Also
Anapests
Iambic Pentameter

Copyright 2010 Douglas. All rights reserved. FifteenMinutesOfFiction.com has been granted non-exclusive rights to display this work. For permission to reprint this item, please contact the author.

Add To My Favorites



Custom Search


 My Reading List
You must be logged in to view your reading list.

 Featured Writing
 New Authors
 Doug's Library

This is the novel which introduces us, for the very first time, to Agatha Christie's Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot.
 
 
News!    Writing Prompt    My Assignment    FAQ    Contact    Privacy Policy    Search     Terms of Use     Login