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Rated: 13+ · Book · Cultural · #2327976

More Poet's Place Poems and Related Poems

#1104017 added December 20, 2025 at 7:24am
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I fear the Grim Reaper is coming



I fear the Grim Reaper is coming


I fear the Grim Reaper is coming
at o dark hundred hour nightmares
I am afraid that no one cares
I hear his drums drumming
I fear death is forthcoming
no one cares about my affairs


I toss and turn, sleep eludes me
I begin crying
feeling I might be dying
I get up nowhere to be
Finally sip some tea
I hear ghosts lying

Just another sleepless night
I get up to write


The HexSonnetta, devised by Andrea Dietrich, consists of fourteen lines, similar to the Sonnet, arranged in stanzas of 6, 6, 2 lines. The lines have six syllables per line (iambic trimeter for the purists among us) and a rhyme scheme of abbaab cddccd ee, as described and demonstrated in the following links:

http://www.shadowpoetry.com/resources/wip/hexsonnetta.html


HexSonnetta

The HexSonnetta, created by Andrea Dietrich, consists of two six-line stanzas and a finishing rhyming couplet with the following set of rules:

Meter: Iambic Trimeter
Rhyme Scheme: a/bb/aa/b c/dd/cc/d ee

Iambic Trimeter means the usual iambic (alternating unstressed/stressed) meter for every line of the poem, but instead of the ten syllables that comprise a typical sonnet's iambic pentameter, this particular form uses six syllables of iambic trimeter per line. Thus, the name HexSonnetta. The first part of the form’s name refers to the syllable count per line. The second part of the name, Sonnetta, is to show this to be a form similar to the sonnet, yet with its shorter lines and different rhyme scheme, it is not the typical sonnet. Not only does this poem have six syllables per line, it also has a set of two six-line stanzas, giving an extra “hex” to the meaning of HexSonnetta. The rhyme scheme is a bit of a mixture of the two traditional sonnet types, with the two 6-line stanzas having more the rhyme scheme of an Italian sonnet, but with the ending rhyming couplet being the featured rhyme scheme of the English sonnet. The first stanza presents the theme of the poem, with the second stanza serving to change the tone of the poem, to introduce a new aspect of the theme or to give added details. The final couplet, as in an English sonnet, can be either a summary (if the theme is simple) or it could be the resolution to a problem presented in the theme. In any event, it should nicely tie together the whole piece and could even appear as a nice “twist” presented at the end.

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