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The Madrigal Sings

1/10/2016

 
Good news: Two of my poems were accepted for publication in The Write City Magazine, ​an e-zine of the Chicago Writers Association. Now, isn’t that a jumpstart to the new year!  Both of these poems, “Winter Solace” and “Autumn’s Myth” are written in the English madrigal form, a form with which I was unfamiliar until 2014 when I participated in a Poem A Day (PAD) Challenge, organized by Writer’s Digest.  The only way I can describe my connection with the madrigal is to recall the sense one gets when meeting a person for the first time and feeling you’ve known him/her forever.  That’s how I connect with this poetic pattern, and when I sit to write a madrigal, an old soul’s voice resonates in my mind. 
    The 13-lined format, developed by Geoffrey Chaucer, is made up of a tercet, a quatrain, and sestet with every line written in iambic pentameter.  The lines within the first stanza (the tercet) are used as refrains.  Here is the pattern:​
A
B1
B2

a
b
A
B1
​

a
b
b
A
B1
B2
    When I posted my poem “You” (which later became “Rain”) on the WD discussion board, three participants commented on the lyrical element of my piece.  I was ecstatic that others heard it, that it wasn’t just me who felt the song I created through this form.  
    I like to experiment with writing genres, and when it comes to poetry, I enjoy the experience of new forms, but I think I’ll always return to the madrigal.  Last night, as a winter storm was revving its engine, I came up with the poem “Hope” and linked it to a beautiful photo by the talented Robin L. Rolder.  (I shared it here.)  I hope you, too, will try your hand at the madrigal.  If you do, please share in the comments!  Happy Writing!

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