The
monotetra is a new poetic form developed by Michael Walker. Each stanza
contains four lines in monorhyme. Each line is in tetrameter (four metrical
feet) for a total of eight syllables. What makes the monotetra so powerful as a
poetic form, is that the last line contains two metrical feet, repeated. It can
have as few as one or two stanzas, or as many as desired.
Stanza
Structure:
Line
1: 8 syllables; A1
Line
2: 8 syllables; A2
Line
3: 8 syllables; A3
Line
4: 4 syllables, repeated; A4, A4
Example Poem
Collaboration
My gramp brought me
a valentine.
To give to mommy and
it's just fine.
I'm four years old
and it's all mine.
A valentine. A
valentine.
It's got a heart and
teddy bear
To show my mom how
much I care.
A tiny voice came
from nowhere,
"I've got no
flair." "I've got no flair."
Somehow that card
said words to me.
"I'm not as
fine as I can be.
I need more
personality"
that she can see,
that she can see."
"With your help
lad, I'll be much more.
I'll be a card that
she'll adore."
I'll not be common
anymore!
Accept this
chore. Accept this chore."
With a crayon I
wrote just "my"
after
"Mom". She is my own, that's
why.
I signed Tommy then
heard card sigh.
I don't know why, I
don't know why.
The card she's kept
for all this time.
A priceless card
that cost a dime.
Mom says I made the
value climb
with my first rhyme,
with my first rhyme.
© Lawrencealot -
February 9, 2013
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