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About Ellis Campbell | Rhyme and Reason | Rhyme | Metre | Pattern | Words | Poetic Terminology | Inverted Phrases
Don't Make Your Poems Too Personal | Terminology | Importance of First Stanza | Metaphors and Similes | Finally... | But...

Ellis Campbell's Writing Tips - Metre

I believe metre is the most important ingredient of Bush Verse - hence ‘the Soul of poetry’. Metre is, however, the hardest thing to learn about writing good Bush Verse.

While it can be learnt I believe it is, to a certain extent, a God-given gift. It comes naturally to some poets, most have to work hard at it and some seem to find it impossible to grasp. Metre is actually rhythm and anything that jars or interrupts the regular flow of the rhythm spoils a poem.

A very common one is where a poet establishes a pattern of Iambic metre - that is weak, strong, weak, strong - then suddenly has two weak or two strong syllables following each other.

This has a jarring effect and can spoil a good poem. There are many different patterns that one might use but I advise poets not to be too ambitious.

A metre pattern of between ten and fifteen syllables per line is recommended, rhyming either AABB or ABAB. If less than ten syllables are used I find it has a tendency to become stilted - unless the author is an accomplished poet.

On the other hand more than fifteen syllable put the rhymes too far apart and they lose impact.

Iambic, as I have just mentioned, is a simple stress pattern to begin with and quite effective. Equally simple and effective is Trochee, whish is the reverse, having strong, weak, strong, weak.

It is better however, to use an even number of syllables for Iambic - 8,10,12,14 for example - and an uneven number of syllables for Trochee - that is 9,11,13 or 15. This gives you the strong beat for your rhyming word on weak beats followed by a strong beat of Dactylic with a strong beat followed by two weak.

But these are more difficult and not recommended unless the poet is quite accomplished.

If your rhyming pattern is AABB every line needs the same stress pattern. However it is not strictly necessary if your rhyming pattern is ABAB. Then your two A lines must be the same stress but the two B lines can be a different stress pattern to the A lines, providing the B lines are identical stress. I’m sorry if this sounds complicated, but I warned you at the outset that metre is the hardest thing to grasp. Do the hard yards and you’ll find it worthwhile.

I will use the first stanza of my poem, “Nostalgia’s Disillusion” to demonstrate a simple, but effective, stress pattern.

A BURN-ished SUN is GLAR-ing, FROM an AMB-er TINT-ed SKY
on PIT-i-FUL sur-ROUND-ings WHERE the DUST-swirls SPIR-al HIGH.
Its DES-o-LA-tion HAUNTS me AS i STAND and GAZE a-BOUT,
a PARCH-ing SOIL’S pros-TRA-tion AFT-er YEARS of BLAZ-ing DROUGHT.
On ROADS that LEAD to NO-where, THROUGH a SEA of NOTH-ing-NESS,
where SCATT-ered SALT-bush MOTT-les PLAINS - there’s LITT-le ELSE, i GUESS.

Read this poem (my book, The Gloss of Bush) and you will see this pattern has been maintained meticulously throughout the six stanzas.

NB. The ideas expressed in this column are entirely my own - plus an occasional piece of sound advice from my learned friend Ron Stevens. They may not necessarily be correct, but they do work for me.
 

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Australian Bush Poetry Championship Results
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2007
Hunter Bush Poets Poetry Competition
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Bush Poetry Competition Results   red a
Bush Poetry Competition Results
2008
Beaudesert Bush Poetry Results
Bundy Bush Poetry Muster Results




2007
Bundy Bush Poetry Muster Results
North Pine Bush Poets Results
Tamworth Bush Poetry Results
Competitions Organiser's Information
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Competition Rules
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       1   ABPA Rules - Introduction
       2   Terminology and Definitions
       3   Categories
       4   Classes
       5   Poet's Brawl
       6   Yarn Spinning
       7   Closing Date
       8   Written Competitions
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   Contemporary Bush Poets

Bobby Miller
Bruce Simpson
Charlee Marshall
Claude Morris
Ellis Campbell
Melanie Hall
Milton Taylor
Ron Stevens
Veronica Weal
Contemporary Poems  red a
    Contemporary Bush Poems

A Grave Situation
Chasing Your Dreams
Down Memory Lane
Rocky Creek
The Bachelor
The English Rose
The Pontiff's Eyes
Valour Rode The Range
Westerly
History of Bush Poetry
   Classic & Traditional Poet's Index

John O'Brien (Monsignore PJ Hartigan)
Henry Lawson
Classic & Traditional Poems  red a
About Ellis Campbell
Rhyme and Reason
Rhyme
Metre
Pattern
Words
Poetic Terminology
Inverted Phrases
Don't Make Your Poems Too Personal
Terminology
Importance of First Stanza
Metaphors and Similes
Finally...
But...
   Classical & Traditional Poetry

Where the Dead Men Lie
The Play
The Women of the West
How We Beat The Favourite
Said Hanrahan
Bell-Birds
Banjo, of the Overflow
Faces in the Street
My Country
Who's Riding Old Harlequin Now
The Riding of the Rebel
The Man From Snowy River
How McDougal Topped The Score