Jump to content
Poetry Magnum Opus

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'Glawn'.

  • 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

Categories

  • The PMO Front Page

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 1 result

  1. Explore the Craft of Writing Poetry Southeast Asian Verse Laos: is a landlocked country surrounded by China, Burma, Viet Nam, Cambodia and Thailand and the literature of the country understandably has been influenced by its neighbors. Buddhism dominated the early writings of Laos and like many of the Southeast Asian cultures, Laoasian poetry was to be performed rather than read. Glawn or gaun (Thai) is a common Lao song and verse form. There is a set tonal pattern in this verse which is impossible to duplicate in English. This form was found at Kaleidoscope.com. The elements of the Glawn are: stanzaic, usually written in quatrains. syllabic, line of 7 syllables each, however because this is sung, it often allows some additional unstressed syllables in the line. rhymed, although a specific rhyme scheme is not mentioned and I could find no example. tonal, impossible to duplicate in English. memorized and performed, not read.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.