170k views
0 votes
I am writing a poem for class.

It’s supposed to be closed-form. I wrote a Shakespearean sonnet but my issue is not the structure but the syllabic meter. Each line ranges from 7-10 syllables. Is that against the laws of closed form poetry lol? I’m worried that each line has to have the same amount of syllables.

User Ethunxxx
by
7.4k points

2 Answers

2 votes

It's called Iambic Pentameter -- it's a rhyme scheme found in Shakespearean sonnets that must be composed of 10 syllables.

Closed form is simply superset of types of poetry such as haikus, tonkas, and well, sonnets.

So, it's not against the laws of closed form poetry per se, it's just against the laws of Shakespearean sonnets.

User Blekione
by
6.2k points
5 votes

Answer:

Yes

Step-by-step explanation:

Closed-form means that the poem must fit every criteria of the poem, and that it cannot veer off the format. If it was an open-form, you can veer off the format, but in this case, you must change it to fit into the criteria given to you.

~

User Naquisha
by
5.5k points