Poetic forms, techniques, and analysis for reading and writing poetry. Covers fixed forms (sonnet, villanelle, haiku, ghazal, sestina, pantoum), free verse and open form, prosody and meter (iambic pentameter, trochee, anapest, dactylic, spondee, scansion), sound devices (alliteration, assonance, consonance, rhyme schemes, enjambment, caesura), figurative language (metaphor, simile, metonymy, synecdoche, personification, apostrophe), imagery and the image (concrete image, objective correlative, imagism), and the line as unit of meaning (lineation, line break, visual form). Use when writing poetry, analyzing poems, or working with compression and sound.
Poetry is language under maximum pressure. Every word carries more weight than in prose because there are fewer of them and each occupies a more conspicuous position. The line, not the sentence, is the fundamental unit. Sound matters as much as sense. Form -- whether inherited or invented -- is not a container for content but a participant in meaning. This skill covers fixed and open forms, prosody, sound devices, figurative language, imagery, and the poetics of the line.
Agent affinity: angelou (voice, rhythm, performance), woolf (lyric prose, imagery), le-guin (form as meaning)
Concept IDs: writ-poetry-forms, writ-figurative-language, writ-imagery-sensory, writ-sound-devices
Fourteen lines of iambic pentameter, organized around a turn (volta) where the poem's argument shifts direction.
Petrarchan (Italian). Octave (abbaabba) poses a question or situation; sestet (cdecde or cdcdcd) resolves or complicates it. The volta falls between octave and sestet.
Shakespearean (English). Three quatrains (abab cdcd efef) develop the argument; a closing couplet (gg) delivers the turn -- often an inversion, paradox, or crystallization. Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 ("My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun") subverts convention for twelve lines, then the couplet redeems it: "And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare / As any she belied with false compare."
Why it endures. The sonnet's proportions create a natural argumentative rhythm: assertion, development, complication, resolution. Fourteen lines is long enough to build an argument, short enough to demand compression. The volta is a structural enactment of thinking -- the moment where the mind changes direction.
Nineteen lines: five tercets (aba) and a closing quatrain (abaa). Two refrains: line 1 repeats as lines 6, 12, 18; line 3 repeats as lines 9, 15, 19. The obsessive repetition suits subjects of grief, rage, or compulsion.
Canonical example. Dylan Thomas, "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night." The refrains ("Do not go gentle" / "Rage, rage against the dying of the light") accumulate force through repetition. Elizabeth Bishop's "One Art" uses the form to enact the speaker's increasingly desperate claim that loss is manageable.
Three lines: 5-7-5 syllables in English (mora-based in Japanese, a different measure). A seasonal reference (kigo) and a cutting word (kireji) that creates a juxtaposition between two images or perceptions.
Basho's frog. "Furu ike ya / kawazu tobikomu / mizu no oto." (The old pond / a frog jumps in / the sound of water.) The poem is not about a frog. It is about the relationship between stillness and interruption, silence and sound. The haiku's compression demands that the reader complete the experience.
Common mistake. Treating haiku as a syllable-counting exercise. The form's purpose is perceptual acuity -- noticing a moment of intersection between the human and natural worlds. A technically correct haiku that lacks this noticing quality is not a haiku in spirit.
A series of autonomous couplets (shers), typically five to fifteen, sharing a rhyme-and-refrain scheme (aa ba ca da...). Each couplet is self-contained -- a complete thought. The poet's name (takhallus) appears in the final couplet. The form originated in seventh-century Arabic poetry and was perfected in Persian and Urdu traditions (Hafiz, Ghalib, Faiz).
What makes it distinct. The couplets need not connect logically. The unity of the ghazal is musical and thematic, not narrative. Agha Shahid Ali brought the form into English with rigorous formal fidelity.
Six six-line stanzas plus a three-line envoi. Six end-words rotate through a fixed permutation pattern (123456, 615243, 364125, 532614, 451362, 246531), then all six appear in the envoi. The obsessive recurrence of end-words creates an effect of circling, entrapment, or meditation.
When to use. When the subject involves repetition, obsession, or return -- the form's mechanics enact the content.
Quatrains where lines 2 and 4 of each stanza become lines 1 and 3 of the next. The final stanza's lines 2 and 4 are the poem's opening lines 3 and 1 (reversed), creating a closed loop. Like the villanelle, the pantoum uses repetition as its primary structural device, but the weaving pattern creates a different texture -- overlapping, dreamlike.
Verse that does not follow a regular meter or rhyme scheme. This does not mean "no form" -- it means the form is invented for each poem rather than inherited. Free verse must still make its lineation matter. If the lines can be rearranged without loss, the poem has no form at all.
Williams's measure. William Carlos Williams sought an American prosody based on speech rhythm rather than inherited English meters. His variable foot and triadic line were attempts to find form in the patterns of American English.
The test. Read the poem as prose. If nothing is lost, the lineation was cosmetic. If meaning, rhythm, or emphasis changes, the lineation is doing work.
A poem written in paragraph form without line breaks. The prose poem retains poetry's compression, imagery, and attention to sound while abandoning the line as structural unit. Charles Baudelaire, Russell Edson, Claudia Rankine.
Poetry where the visual arrangement of text on the page is itself meaningful. George Herbert's "Easter Wings" (1633) is shaped like wings. E. E. Cummings scattered words across the page. Concrete poetry (Eugen Gomringer, the Noigandres group) treats the page as a visual field.
| Foot | Pattern | Example | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iamb | unstressed-STRESSED | a-LIVE | Rising, natural in English speech |
| Trochee | STRESSED-unstressed | GAR-den | Falling, insistent |
| Anapest | unstressed-unstressed-STRESSED | in-ter-VENE | Rolling, galloping |
| Dactyl | STRESSED-unstressed-unstressed | MER-ri-ly | Falling, expansive |
| Spondee | STRESSED-STRESSED | HEART-BREAK | Heavy, emphatic |
| Pyrrhic | unstressed-unstressed | of the | Light, transitional |
Five iambs per line: da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM. The dominant meter of English poetry from Chaucer through the twentieth century. It approximates the rhythm of English speech closely enough to feel natural but is regular enough to create a pulse the ear tracks.
Substitution. No skilled poet writes unvaried iambic pentameter. Trochaic substitution in the first foot ("NEVER, never, never, never, never" -- Lear), spondaic substitution for emphasis, feminine endings (an extra unstressed syllable) for softness. The meter is a baseline that variations play against.
The practice of marking stressed and unstressed syllables to reveal a poem's metrical pattern. Scansion is analytical, not prescriptive -- it describes what the poem does, not what it should do. Disagreements about scansion are common and productive; they reveal where a poem's rhythm is genuinely ambiguous.
Alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sounds. "Full fathom five thy father lies."
Consonance: repetition of consonant sounds within or at the end of words. "Pitter-patter" (t/r pattern).
Repetition of vowel sounds. "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (long a). Assonance creates internal music without the closure of rhyme.
End rhyme: perfect (moon/June), slant (moon/bone), eye (love/move). Internal rhyme: rhyme within a line. Scheme notation: abab (alternate), abba (envelope), aabb (couplet).
Slant rhyme (near rhyme). Emily Dickinson's signature device. Perfect rhyme resolves; slant rhyme unsettles. The near-miss creates tension that mirrors the poems' thematic unease.
Enjambment: a sentence or phrase runs past the line break without punctuation. Creates momentum, surprise, and double meaning (the line means one thing at its end, another when the next line arrives).
Caesura: a pause within a line, usually marked by punctuation. Creates rhythm within the line and controls pacing. "To be, || or not to be -- || that is the question."
Simile uses "like" or "as" to compare: "My love is like a red, red rose."
Metaphor asserts identity: "All the world's a stage." Metaphor is stronger because it collapses the distance between tenor (the thing described) and vehicle (the thing it is compared to).
Extended metaphor (conceit). A metaphor sustained across an entire poem or passage. John Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" compares lovers to a compass across six stanzas.
Metonymy: substituting an associated thing for the thing itself. "The crown" for the monarchy. "The pen is mightier than the sword."
Synecdoche: a part stands for the whole (or the whole for a part). "All hands on deck." "She got a new set of wheels."
Personification: attributing human qualities to non-human things. "The wind whispered through the trees."
Apostrophe: addressing an absent person, abstract concept, or object directly. "O Death, where is thy sting?" Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn" addresses the urn itself.
In poetry, the line is a unit of attention. The reader pauses -- however briefly -- at the end of each line. This pause creates emphasis, ambiguity, and rhythm that prose cannot achieve. The decision of where to break a line is the most consequential formal choice a poet makes.
| Technique | Effect | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Break after a complete phrase | Rest, resolution | "The art of losing isn't hard to master." |
| Break mid-phrase (enjambment) | Momentum, surprise | "Let us go then, you and I, / When the evening is spread out against the sky" |
| Break creating double meaning | Ambiguity | "We real cool. We / Left school." (Brooks) -- "We" hangs alone, vulnerable |
| Short lines | Speed, urgency, isolation | Williams's narrow columns |
| Long lines | Breath, expansiveness, catalog | Whitman, Ginsberg |
If you write your poem as prose and nothing changes, your lineation is not working. Every line break should earn its existence by creating emphasis, pause, ambiguity, or rhythmic shape that the prose version lacks.