Jump to content
Poetry Magnum Opus

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'deibhidhe'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Blogs

  • Tinker's Blog
  • PMO Members' Promotional Blog
  • General Discussion Blog

Forums

  • Members' Poetry
    • Showcase
    • Showcase (overflow)
    • Workshop
    • Playground
    • Longer Works
    • Promotions
    • Archive
  • Reference Section
    • Tools
    • Explore the Craft of Writing Poetry
    • Misc. Reference Material
  • Special Interest
    • World Poetry
    • PMO Audio
  • Prose
    • The Prose Forum
  • Reading
    • A Poem I Read Today
    • Favorite Poets
  • General
    • General Discussion
    • Literary Discussion
    • Articles
  • Art
    • Art - General Discussion
    • Photography, Drawing, and Painting
  • Welcome
    • Site Welcome, Philosophy, and Rules
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Feature Requests
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Special Requests
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s How-to
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Visions for the Site
  • Mostly-Free Exchange of Ideas Club's Topics

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 1 result

  1. Tinker

    Deibhidhe and its Variations

    Explore the Craft of Writing Poetry Irish Verse Forms Deibhidhe (jay-vée) ( light rhyme) and its variations are dán direach (requiring alliteration in every line). The forms are written in rhymed couplets in which a stressed end syllable rhymes with an unstressed end syllable. In English, rhyme is usually between 2 stressed syllables (yellow/ mellow, time/ rhyme ) but Celtic verse often deliberately rhymes a stressed and unstressed syllable (distress / angriness, west / conquest), easier said than done. As with most ancient Irish forms the Deibhidhes are written with cywddydd (harmony of sound) and dunadh (ending the poem with the same word, phrase or line with which the poem began) The elements of the Deibhidhe are: written in any number of quatrains, each line has 7 syllables. composed with light rhyming in couplets, rhyming a stressed end syllable with an unstressed end syllable. alliterated, alliteration of two words in each line, written with the final word of L4 alliterating with the preceding stressed word. composed to include at least two cross-rhymes between L3 and L4. (the cross rhyme has a little wiggle room and can appear anywhere within the first half of the line.) Rhyme scheme aabb ccdd etc. x x x x x x a x x x x x x a x b x x x x b x x b x x b b Rain's Grace by Judi Van Gorder Listen to the late rain sing a wave of wind songs ringing mending the hearts of all men lend us grace Oh Lord, listen The Deibhidhe Baise Fri Toin (Baise Fri Toin, deviates from the consistent syllable count and requires 2 syllable end words.) The elements are: written in any number of quatrains. written with uneven lines: syllabic 3-7-7-1. alliterated, alliteration of two words in each line, light rhymed, aa bb. terminated, written with two-syllable end words in L1 and L2. x (x a) x x x x x (x a) x x x x x x b b Easter Goodies by judi Van Gorder Best blue bow Peeps in white, pink or yellow jelly beans in time tested red. Girls agree, boys bite the Easter bunny, chocolate eggs, creamiest best. Deibhidhe Guilbnech (I am only guessing that guilbnech means simplified or retracted because the defining feature is to use only stressed end words when supposedly deibhidhe means light rhyme or rhyming stressed with unstressed syllable.) The elements are: written in any number of quatrains, each line has 7 syllables. alliterated, alliteration of two words in each line, rhymed, aabb. written with all end rhyme stressed even though the name suggests otherwise. Guilbnech by Judi Van Gorder Too late to become a bard to write rhymed rhythm is hard Two lavish lines that are new and reach requirements too. Deibhidhe Guilbnech Dialtach ( I'm guessing again, Light rhyme retracted with consonant end words.)The elements are: written in any number of quatrains, each line has 7 syllables. rhymed, aabb. alliterated, alliteration between two words in each line, all end-words should consonate. So the rhyme aabb still needs to end with the same last consonant. Celtic Form by Judi Van Gorder Start with lines to separate thoughts from rhetoric, relate wondrous words to craft the art then bring me back to the start.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.