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It's really not! I tried writing it in 1/2/1/2 but it sounds so incredibly wonky! Like an audience at a show clapping on 1/3 instead of 2/4.A sonnet is traditionally in iambic pentameter.
Each iamb is short-long and there are 5 of them. So each line has 10 syllables. It's not really natural to English. But there it is. LOL
Getting a name for what the rhytms are called helped a bunch! Lots of graphs and easier to understand articles found.Short-short-long is an anapest; you used 3 of them in each line for 9 syllables.
Modern poetry can be whatever, I suppose. That's why I said "traditionally."It's really not! I tried writing it in 1/2/1/2 but it sounds so incredibly wonky! Like an audience at a show clapping on 1/3 instead of 2/4.
By traditionally, does that mean exclusively? Looking up some sonnet guides before i wrote it, most said "pfsht, dont worry about it".
BTW, I like the ABBA rhyme scheme. I always seem to default to ABAB and so on.as I lay bleeding out in the snow
car horns honking and voices so loud
a man stops and looks down through his shroud
his hand reaches for me; "time to go"
A walking meter lends itself to writeTen syllables per line but not in Iambic pentameter. How would you make this better?
What are these charges on the statement, love
Said my husband with eyes full of heat
I stammered and confessed my ignorance
Gazed down, blushing and knowing what was next
Removed my dress, bra, shoes, and lace panties
Kneeling, waited to hear his trousers fall