Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Cameo Verse Form
For such a short little poem, there sure are a lot of rules to the Cameo. This rather interesting form was invented by Alice Maud Spokes. It is written as a single sentence of thirty-five syllables spread out over seven lines. The syllable count is 2-5-8-3-8-7-2.
There is no rhyme to the cameo, but each line should end on a strong word. Line breaks should be naturally occurring, where you would pause in speaking. The poem should be a single thought, so avoid using semicolons.
Schematic:
xx
xxxxx
xxxxxxxx
xxx
xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx
xx
This actually isn’t as bad as it first looked. In fact, it’s kind of a fun form.
spider,
busy spinning webs,
you think I don’t see you up there
but I do
and I’m about to get my broom
to ruin all your hard work
again.
lazy,
you sleep in the sun
when there are mousies to be found
and hunted,
which is the job of the housecat
and you know it, lazy thing,
not me.
Labels:
Cameo verse,
new form,
new poem,
poetry day
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