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Anyone for tanka?
In those years -- 9th - 12th centuries -- when tanka was so fashionable, poets competing in contests revived an old Chinese form by linking tanka poems together in a novel way. The poem was "broken" in half so one author wrote the 5-7-5 part and another responded and finished the poem by adding his (mostly men did this though it was first done by a woman!) 7-7 part. Instead of stopping there, someone else wrote a new 5-7-5 poem to "answer" to the previous 7-7 link and they named the genre renga -- meaning linked elegance. This proved to be so much fun poets were soon writing poems of 1,000 and even 10,000 links.
http://www.ahapoetry.com/haidefjr.htm
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Radical Knitting
plutarch 02/10/2005 12:35 AM ![]()
Re: Radical Knitting
Wordwind 02/10/2005 12:40 AM ![]()
Re: Radical Knitting
plutarch 02/10/2005 12:50 AM ![]()
Re: Radical Knitting
belligerentyouth 02/11/2005 8:23 AM ![]()
Re: Radical Knitting
of troy 02/11/2005 1:36 PM ![]()
Re: Radical Knitting
plutarch 02/11/2005 5:49 PM ![]()
Re: An aside: brows
Wordwind 02/13/2005 11:55 AM ![]()
Re: An aside: brows
plutarch 02/13/2005 12:41 PM ![]()
Re: An aside: brows
of troy 02/13/2005 12:47 PM ![]()
Re: An aside: brows
themilum 02/13/2005 2:03 PM ![]()
Re: plucky number
maverick 02/13/2005 2:41 PM ![]()
Re: plucky number
plutarch 02/13/2005 2:51 PM ![]()
Re: plucky number
maverick 02/13/2005 3:22 PM
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