General Poetry posted July 21, 2016 | Chapters: | ...422 423 -424- 425... |
A Cat-a-strophe Poem
A chapter in the book Little Poems
Upon the Web
by Treischel
|
I captured a photo of this spider near my house wall the other day. It is a common American Grass Spider. Its web didn't show up in the photo, but was definitely there. It was strung between the arms of my house's hose keeper wheel. This spider was on its web, but facing my house, so this is its underside.
Agelenopsis is a genus of spiders, known as American Grass Spiders. They weave sheet webs that have a funnel shelter on one edge. The web is not sticky, but these spiders make up for that shortcoming by running very rapidly. The larger specimens (depending on species) can get up to approximately 5.5 inches(19 mm) in body length. Their bite releases agatoxins that cause rapid paralysis in insect prey, though their venom is not medically significant to humans. Thank goodness. Source: Wikipedia.
This poem is a Cat-a-strophe poem.
I called this format a Cat-a-strophe.
A Cat-a- strophe, as first reviewed in I Am Cat's lovely poem titled, "In Martha's Vineyard", (July 4th, 2016). It is a play on the word "catastrophe". Of course "Cat" because the from was created by our own Catherine Ginn. A "Strophe" is actually a poetic term that is also known as a "Volta" or turn. The format consists of any number of Quatrains, followed by a single line, which is written in iambic pentameter. It is written with a rhyme scheme of:
abab, c, dede, c, fgfg, c, hihi, c (and so on).
After each quatrain is a four syllable line which rhymes with all the other single lines (c rhyme).
I dubbed the style of this poem, a 'Cat-a-strophe', however the creator herself has not acknowledged nor endorsed the name. Any negative feedback concerning the name should be directed at me, not her. Dean Kuch dubbed this form a "Cat-o-tonic. I guess Cat will decide.
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents. Agelenopsis is a genus of spiders, known as American Grass Spiders. They weave sheet webs that have a funnel shelter on one edge. The web is not sticky, but these spiders make up for that shortcoming by running very rapidly. The larger specimens (depending on species) can get up to approximately 5.5 inches(19 mm) in body length. Their bite releases agatoxins that cause rapid paralysis in insect prey, though their venom is not medically significant to humans. Thank goodness. Source: Wikipedia.
This poem is a Cat-a-strophe poem.
I called this format a Cat-a-strophe.
A Cat-a- strophe, as first reviewed in I Am Cat's lovely poem titled, "In Martha's Vineyard", (July 4th, 2016). It is a play on the word "catastrophe". Of course "Cat" because the from was created by our own Catherine Ginn. A "Strophe" is actually a poetic term that is also known as a "Volta" or turn. The format consists of any number of Quatrains, followed by a single line, which is written in iambic pentameter. It is written with a rhyme scheme of:
abab, c, dede, c, fgfg, c, hihi, c (and so on).
After each quatrain is a four syllable line which rhymes with all the other single lines (c rhyme).
I dubbed the style of this poem, a 'Cat-a-strophe', however the creator herself has not acknowledged nor endorsed the name. Any negative feedback concerning the name should be directed at me, not her. Dean Kuch dubbed this form a "Cat-o-tonic. I guess Cat will decide.
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