BiMonthly blog challenge accepted with an occasional jaunt to the Banana Bar Challenge. |
I'm sorry to tell such a tumultuous tale in an attempt to navigate this journey into a gargantuan challenge. When I first read the prompt I copied it to this page as I always do and just off the top of my head, wrote the above. I did not connect it to the Blog forum and assumed it would not be read. While writing the above, I got the idea that I would write a real poem to comply with whatever Dave's trying to catch up posted for "Form of the week: Duplex" over at
Dave had discovered a new invented verse form I had not previously included in my research at PoetryMagnumOpus.com, the Duplex. I tried to research a little further then added it to my index and wrote a poem using the Duplex frame and the prompt words for today's blog. I was killing two birds with one stone. I wouldn't write all of this explanation if my unintended original post had not been responded to before I came back here. Ooops. So here is my blog for the day. Journey to the Sea The river's tumultuous rapids traverse gargantuan boulders. Rapids race over giant boulders on a frantic escape to the sea. To the sea, to the sea, to be free to navigate on the ocean deep. I want to travel the ocean deep where many sailors have lost their way. Fear not that they have lost their way for many more embrace the journey. I too wish to take on the journey, to strike the sails and glide with the wind Filling the sails, gliding with the wind I welcome tumultuous rapids. ~~Judi Van Gorder Written in the new verse form the Duplex. . The Duplex is a recent invention of Jericho Brown, associate professor and Director of the Creative Writing Program at Emory University, Atlanta GA. He describes the Duplex as "a new form that renders the musicality and structure of the ghazal, the sonnet, and the blues on a single plane." The defining feature appears to have a little French flare, a tumbling refrain that creates a sort of domino effect. The elements of the Duplex are: 1. a quatorzain, a poem in 14 lines, made up of 7 couplets. If it sings and has volta or turn, it could be termed a sonnet. 2. loosely written with lines of equal length and meter ( examples use 9 to 11 syllables) Similar to the ghazal although ghazal rhyme patterns are not employed. 3. composed with a modified repeat of the 2nd line of each couplet as the 1st line of the next couplet creating a domino refrain, similar to the blues repeat of a modified L1 as L2 in each triplet. 4. rhyme is created by the refrains repeat, if the end word of L2 in the previous couplet is repeated within the L1 of the next couplet, the end word of L1 should still rhyme with the previous end word. Rhyme scheme ab bc cd de ef fg ga |