Heated Rivalry | 1.06 The Cottage

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Heated Rivalry | 1.06 The Cottage
Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie in Feltre, Italy for the Olympic Torch Relay | January 25, 2026
AgnĆØs Varda
Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle Vincent van Gogh, Garden at Arles (1888)
me: :(
spring birdies: peep peep
me: :)
!!!
HAVANA ROSE LIU Thom Browne Fall 2024 Show
Unidentified women c. 1900
good omens text posts (insp)
Is this truly the future you wanted? š¦
Magical stained glass
i like queerplatonic zelink not because i think them being strictly romantic is wrong but because i feel like its wildly in character for their levels of dramatics to have a relationship dynamic nobody but them understands
like yeah there goes princess zelda and her appointed swordsman, no they arent dating but yes they sleep in the same bed and will spend the rest of their lives together but no it isnt romantic but yes they love each other and are endlessly devoted to each other. they communicate solely through visions and self sacrifice and if you get rid of one the other will kill you with their bare hands. hope this helps <3
^ and ganon is there
BREAKING!!!! cats simply too gay and in love to walk
happy pride. may you, too, one day be so gay and in love that you can never travel efficiently because you and your beloved keep smashing your soft, gay little heads together.
Valentino, Swarovski crystal and enamel ring (x) | Valentino Ready To Wear Fall 2015 (x)
HAPPY TOGETHER (1997), DIR. WONG KAR-WAI
The overwhelming dominance of free verse poetry in English sucks actually. Itās not a bad form but it IS bad that itās the main form of english language poetry being published
I know everyone is conditioned to think rhyme, rhythm and meter is for either maudlin, sing-songy and childish poetry or excessively formal, pretentious poetry, but these things are just what makes phrases and lines memorable and punchy.
English naturally has rhythm and all poetry uses this stuff a little bit, itās legitimately just What Make Word Sound Good
more importantly, rhyme, rhythm and meter are very connected to memory. thereās a reason why little songs and chants are our most enduring and effective memory tools
It occurs to me that most people donāt know how these things work so here:Ā
How Poetic Rhythm, Meter, and Rhyme Actually Work!
People seem to only learn about rhyme in grade school, and they donāt appear to learn that rhymes other than perfect rhymes (rhymes where the endingĀ āsound(s)ā perfectly match) exist.Ā
When I first got into writing my own poetry, I repeatedly heardĀ ādonāt use rhymes likeĀ ātrueā andĀ āblueā,ā but for some reason itās hard to find an explanation of this.
So here it is.Ā āTrueā andĀ āblueā are perfect rhymes because the ending sounds are identical.
Most pairs consideredĀ ārhymesā in poetry do not perfectly match like that. Iām sorry grade school and colloquial usage lied to you. Rhymes are sounds at the ends of lines (or even inside lines!) that echo each other. Thatās it.Ā
Hereās a set of rhymes that are at least close to perfect, from the songĀ āYou Shook Me All Night Longā by AC/DC:Ā
She was a fast machine, she kept her motor clean/She was the best damn woman that I ever seenĀ
However, imperfect rhymes are REALLY, REALLY COMMON and they often sound better. Hereās a couple rhyming lyrics from the songĀ āEvery Rose Has Its Thornā by Poison:Ā
Every rose has its thorn/Just like every night has its dawn
This still rhymes. Itās just not perfect.Ā
Hereās the thing. Rhyme is supposed to make Poem Sound Good On Brain, and it is only about 20% of what makes poetry Sound Good On Brain.
To talk about meter, we have to talk about stress. Stress is, like rhyme, inexact, but it arguably messes stuff up a lot more if you donāt understand it.Ā
To explain what stress is, imagine this scenario: You are seen walking hastily away from the zoo in a ski mask, carrying a large cage covered with a sheet that occasionally emits strange sounds. (I promise this will make sense in a second.)
Before you can leave the parking lot, though, you are stopped by an angry zookeeper.Ā āDid you steal the capybara from its cage?ā the zookeeper asks.Ā
You make one of the following excuses (please read these aloud, itāll help):Ā
I didnāt steal the capybara from its cage.Ā
I didnāt steal the capybara from its cage.Ā
I didnāt steal the capybara from its cage.Ā
What are you doing to the bolded word that makes the meaning of your excuse different? Youāre putting emphasis, or stress, on it.Ā
All English speech naturally has places that are stressed. Without stress, it sounds like a robot in a 1970ā²s cartoon is talking. Specifically, almost all multisyllabic English words have specific syllables that are always stressed. (There are some regional variations.) You can figure it out by simply reading the word aloud with the stress on different syllables until you find the one that sounds normal and not evil:Ā
Walrus vs. WalrusĀ
Giraffe vs. Giraffe
Tiger vs. TigerĀ
Baboon vs. Baboon
Ostrich vs. Ostrich
RaccoonĀ vs. Raccoon
Penguin vs. Penguin
Gazelle vs. GazelleĀ
Gecko vs. Gecko
Vulture vs. Vulture
Okay, letās leave the zoo. Try it with these words:Ā
DivineĀ
ShowerĀ
ConvinceĀ
Pebble
SidewalkĀ
CarpetĀ
SmoothieĀ
AttractĀ
Relax
Darkness
GardenĀ
Surpass
ObjectĀ
Wait, whatās that last one? Thatās right, some English words are indistinguishable except for which syllable is stressed.Ā āI object!ā you might say at a wedding you donāt approve of.Ā āItās an unidentified flying object,ā you might say if you glimpse an alien spaceship in a blurry picture.Ā
Now try it with some three syllable words:Ā
ImmortalĀ
MagentaĀ
Poetry
CarnivoreĀ
Tomorrow
Entity
I feel likeĀ āentityā is a noun andĀ āentityā would have to be a verb, if you catch my drift.Ā
(You will notice that two-syllable English words typically have stress on the first syllable, and that three-syllable English words usually have stress on the second syllable or maybe the first.)
Single-syllable words have fuzzier rules. A single word can be stressed or unstressed depending on context. In general, content-heavy words are stressed, whereas connecting words that donāt have much meaning can kinda do what they want depending on the words around them.
English likes to periodically pick up stress, like a curious hiker periodically picking up rocks. You can barely say more than three syllables in a row without naturally emphasizing something.Ā
This is convenient, because when stresses occur in a rhythmic pattern, ambiguous words will be swept along with the pattern.
Hereās another thing to read aloud. See which of the following couplets āsoundsā better to you:Ā
Supreme divine giraffes surpass raccoons/and gecko gods ascend beyond giraffes. Ā Ā
Angel giraffes beyond mortal knowledge/cannot defeat divine gecko powers.Ā
Both couplets have the same number of syllables (ten in each line), but only the first line is metered. You might recognize itāitās iambic pentameter! This is a form of accentual-syllabic verse.Ā
You will notice thatĀ āpentā means five, but thereās ten syllables. Fear notāĀ āpentameterā refers to the number of feet in the line. In this case, itās the number of iambs.Ā
An iamb is an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. Giraffe is an iamb. Divine is an iamb.Ā Any two syllables with that pattern can be.
There are three other main options forĀ āfeetā in English accentual-syllabic verse: trochees (stressed-unstressed), dactyls (stressed-unstressed-unstressed), and anapests (unstressed-unstressed-stressed). There is also the spondee (two stressed syllables) and pyrrhus (two unstressed syllables) but you canāt really write an entire poem with those (okay you TECHNICALLY can with the spondee, but there are only a few examples).Ā Not all English meter is based onĀ āfeet,ā but this is a good starting point.Ā
When people think poetry, they think rhyme. Never meter. When people who havenāt studied poetry try to write poetry, they make it rhyme, but they donāt utilize meter.Ā
This is not good, because in my opinion, rhyme, especially perfect rhyme, typically needs to be accompanied by some kind of rhythm to not sound like shit.Ā
You know who can pull off perfect rhymes in poetry? Robert Frost. Iām going to put an entire poem here.Ā
Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer To stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen lake The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake To ask if there is some mistake. The only other soundās the sweep Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.
This doesnāt have that cringy sing-songy effect that a lot of perfect rhyme creates, and I believe that this is BECAUSE the rhythm of the syllables is so formal and strict.Ā
Imagine if it was like this:Ā
These woods belong to someone I know. He lives in the village though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods, all covered in snow.Ā
This is so bad.Ā
You can do really cool things with the combination of rhyme and meter. Hereās one of my favorite examples, with stresses bolded:
Now Iām falling asleep and sheās calling a cab While heās having a smoke and sheās taking a drag Now theyāre going to bed, and my stomach is sick And itās all in my head, but sheās touching his
Whatās the pattern? Unstressed, unstressed, stressed. How many of these per line? Four. Anapestic tetrameter, my friends. Except, of course, for the last line, which we expect to rhyme withĀ āsick.āĀ
The pattern is so powerful that when you listen to the song, your brain fills inā¦a word rhyming withĀ āsick,ā and it really turns you upside down when the pattern isnāt finished as you expect.Ā
āMr. Brightsideā isnāt the usual example of a song that isĀ āpoetic,ā but there is a lot of very competent usage of poetic techniques in these lines. Pay attention to how rhyme is used here.Ā āCabā andĀ ādragā are not perfect rhymes, but they echo.Ā āFallingā andĀ ācallingā are perfect rhymes within one line.Ā āBedā andĀ āheadā are perfect rhymes in the middle of two consecutive lines. The words that end inĀ ā-ingā create echoes.Ā
Rhyme is used, but itās never used in the exact same pattern twice. The different rhyme patterns interweave with each other and create a lot of variety while still having continuity. Ā
I donāt have a conclusion here. I just think itās sad that this isnāt common knowledge, since we absolutely do have an intuitive understanding of when something scans and when it doesn'tāwe know when something āsounds right.ā
It disappears when weāre trying to write a poem on purpose, but itās there when weāre parodying a song or slogan, or sharing variations of the āroses are red, violets are blueā meme.
*bursts through the wall like the kool-aid man* POETIC METER MY BELOVED
I would argue that the best free verse does have meterāyou can create rhythms without being so structuredābut thatās because English is such a rhythmic language, and poetry relies on that.
I remember in one of my college poetry classes, I kept turning in free verse poems that the professor kept using as examples of meter. There was one specific poem about the rhythm of walking and how my disability interferes with that, and my prof was praising it to the high heavens because the lines describing other peopleās walking were in iambic pentameter but the meter started breaking down as I described my own pace. None of that was something I thought about while writing, but it was absolutely something I emphasized in revision.
In my opinion, poetry is less about āpoetic ideasā and more about how language crafts meaning. Obviously, prose writers pay close attention to the rhythm and flow of their sentences too, but what we think of as āpoeticā prose doesnāt actually always make for good poetry. Good poems use the musicality of language itself to make their point.
Hello Im vibrating at the speed of sound at the mere concept of that poem about the rhythm of walking because thatās where the concept of āfeetā in poetic meter comes from
Art! Art! ART! Metamorphosis! TRANSFORMATION! RE-INTERPRETATION OF THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE! Beautiful! Enriched by diversity!
That first Iambic pentametre example BAFFLED me until I remembered that you probably say Raccoon with a different stress to how I do- those regional differences really matter!
THIS ALSO ABSOLUTELY APPLIES TO PROSE.
Like, you definitely donāt have to know about poetry to write prose, but if you love the kind of prose that sings on a sentence level and you want to know how to do that, READ POETRY.Ā Everything about poetry applies to prose - alliteration, rhyme, assonance, the visual structure and length of lines, and hoo boy howdy, does meter ever apply.Ā
While you probably wonāt use those poetry elements all the time, they will color your work, and when you need to have a showstopper sentence you can pull out those tools and make the words do exactly what you want.Ā And the bittersweet joy of this is that most readers wonāt realize why they are being so affected; theyāll think itās just plot and character and setting and theme and not know that theyāre being influenced by the very beat and flow of the words themselves.Ā
Thereās music underneath the words and that is why they sing. Ā