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Crazy stuff

Northern Rancher

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Joined
Feb 10, 2005
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Location
saskatchewan
I'm a 4H leader so I got the cowboy poetry leader's guide sent out to me. To start with its 51 pages long and you need a master's in English to follow it. Most coweboy poetry flows from the heart and your rhyme scheme just falls into place. I doubt I'll tackle this with my project group. They making 4H less fun and more like university every year.
 
Boy now that's Sad. I darn sure wouldn't have much to do with Cowboy poetry if it resembled school work. Don't think a kid would either....... Do you have to follow their lead or can you wander off a little?
 
Can you come up and teach Iambic,Anapest,Trochee and Dactyl meter to the kids lol. I always do my own projects-I'm a hands on guy have them sort fat steers, cull bulls for feert and legs-last year vthe jr girls designed a feedlot-i gave them a budget and they had at it. Sharp kids I might add.
 
I don't know what them words mean, and don't think you do either. I figured that 4H'rs could veer of course a little or all them show steers would still be short and square like they were when I had hair. Jeez, that rhymed up.........maybe I got something going...............
 
phantom said:
I don't know what them words mean, and don't think you do either. I figured that 4H'rs could veer of course a little or all them show steers would still be short and square like they were when I had hair. Jeez, that rhymed up.........maybe I got something going...............


I know you went to University, I saw you there one evening. :wink:
 
That made me laugh. I remember that. Believe it or not, I been back to that School there quite a number of times since.
 
Iambic pentameter is one of many meters used in poetry and drama. It describes a particular rhythm that the words establish in each line. That rhythm is measured in small groups of syllables; these small groups of syllables are called "feet". The word "iambic" describes the type of foot that is used. The word "pentameter" indicates that a line has five of these "feet".

These terms originally applied to the quantitative meter of classical Greek poetry. They were adopted to describe the equivalent meters in English accentual-syllabic verse.

In common words its the rhythm...think of a trotting or galloping horse beat..or singsong....

"One bright day in the middle of the night
two dead boys got up to fight
back to back they faced each other
drew thier swords and shot each other"

sorry it was the first one that came to mind LOL


An anapaest, anapæst, or anapest, also called antidactylus, is a metrical foot used in formal poetry. In classical quantitative meters it consists of two short syllables followed by a long one (as in a-na-paest); in accentual stress meters it consists of two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed syllable.

I am out of humanity's reach
I must finish my journey alone

OK this one has no use in MY MIND in regard to cowboy poetry.....


A trochee or choree, choreus, is a metrical foot used in formal poetry consisting of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one.


Peter, Peter pumpkin-eater
Had a wife and couldn't keep her.



Dactylic pentameter is a form of meter in poetry. It is normally found in the second line of the classical Latin or Greek elegiac couplet, following the first line of dactylic hexameter.

The meter consists of two halves, both shaped around the dactylic hexameter line up to the main caesura. That is, it has two dactyls (for which spondees can be substituted), following by a longum, followed by two dactyls (which must remain dactyls), followed by a longum. Thus the line most normally looks as follows (note that - is a long syllable, u a short syllable and U either one long or two shorts):

- U | - U | - || - u u | - u u | -




Me I would explan the first one since it does help with the flow of the poem the rest I would give them the definations and yall together figure out a way to define them to the Judge.....dont worry about using them.....if it is good and it is easy to listen to then you will have all the proper components without the stress LOL
This is about learning BUT suppose to be fun~ you can do it [/b]
 
NR--just let the kids go free verse---if it ends up fitting a rhyme scheme great and if not who cares---the idea is to let them have fun and not get bogged down in the technicalities. Poetry should be free and fun, especially in 4-H. I say you go with it---tell them here is the reading literature on it, but we are going to go with our hearts and guts on this one!
 
I'd rather lance an abscess steer
Than learn iambic pentameter

Rather get a horsefly down my vest
than master the nuance of anapest

Face an outbreak of BVD
Than figure out to use Trochee

Ride a bronc in a saddle slick
than try out dactylic

Thanks for the help Ms. sage but cowboy poetry is wild and as free as the horses you write about-I'll get the kids to reach down in the hearts and write in their own style. They won't be judged we only judge calves and speeches.
 
A bronc from Canova they couldn't truck it
So Hartley said boys lets buck it
They dragged him in
All ragged and thin
And dammed if the kid almost stuck it

My first limerick lol.
 
Maybe we had better change topics before all them other closet limerickers bust one out. Your scarin the hell out of me northy.........
 
Just reread that, and I hope that everyone realizes that my comments are tongue in cheek and I would never accuse NR. of having any of those aformentioned qualities.
 

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