References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantoum
https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/pantoum-poetic-form
https://www.thoughtco.com/pantoum-2725577
We began with a sonnet form Bjorn, then a rubaiyat by Frank and here I continue Poetry Forms with the pantoum.
This prompt will remain open for four weeks to allow for editing and perfecting our entries.
Pantoum
The pantoum is a poetic form derived from the pantun, a Malay verse form: specifically from the pantun berkait, a series of interwoven quatrains and rhyming couplets.
Brief History
After Victor Hugo published a translation of a Malay pantun into French in the notes to “Les Orientales” in 1829, the form was adopted by French and British writers that include Charles Baudelaire and Austin Dobson. In Malaysia, my home country, the pantun is still very popular at weddings where the older relatives from both sides of the bridal party will exchange love “pantun” blessing the newlyweds a blissful first night together and a long happy marriage.
Basic structure
It is similar to a villanelle with repeating lines throughout the poem. It is composed of a series of quatrains; the second and fourth lines of each stanza are repeated as the first.
The pattern continues for any number of stanzas, except for the final stanza, which differs in the repeating pattern.
The first and third lines of the last stanza are the second and fourth of the penultimate; the first line of the poem is the last line of the final stanza, and the third line of the first stanza is the second of the final.
Ideally, the meaning of lines shifts when they are repeated although the words remain exactly the same: this can be done by shifting punctuation, punning, or simply recontextualizing.
A four-stanza pantoum is common (although more may be used), and in the final stanza, lines one and three from the first stanza can be repeated, or new lines can be written.
The basic pantoum form is as follows:
Stanza 1
A
B
C
D
Stanza 2
B
E
D
F
Stanza 3
E
G
F
H
Stanza 4
G
C
H
A
Verse forms
The modern pantoum form is written in interlocking quatrains (four-line stanzas), in which lines two and four of one stanza are used as lines one and three of the next. The lines can be of any length, and the poem can go on for an indefinite number of stanzas. Usually, the paired lines are also rhymed. The paired lines are lines #1 and #3; and lines #2 and #4.
The poem can be resolved at the end either by picking up lines one and three of the first stanza as lines two and four of the last, thus closing the circle of the poem, or simply by closing with a rhymed couplet.
Then there is the imperfect pantoum, described below; the final stanza differs from the basic form stated above, and the second and fourth lines may be different from any preceding lines.
Stanza 1
A
B
C
D
Stanza 2
B
E
D
F
Stanza 3
E
G
F
H
Stanza 4
G
I
H
J
Whichever form you chose, you may end with a rhymed couplet after the 3rd Stanza
The interweaving of repeated lines in a pantoum suits the poem particularly well to ruminations on the past, circling around a memory or a mystery to tease out implications and meanings. The change in context that arises from the addition of two new lines in each stanza changes the significance of each repeated line on its second appearance. This gentle back-and-forth motion gives the effect of a series of small waves lapping on a beach, each advancing a bit farther up the sand until the tide turns, and the pantoum wraps back around itself.
Rhyming schemes
Baudelaire’s famous poem “Harmonie du soir” is usually cited as an example of the form, but it is irregular. The stanzas rhyme abba rather than the expected abab, and the last line, which is supposed to be the same as the first, is original.
Meter
the rhyming lines have no meter
A Straightforward Example
The lyrics to the song “I Am Going to Like It Here,” from the musical “Flower Drum Song” by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, is a familiar and most straightforward example. Notice how the second and fourth lines of the first stanza are repeated in the first and third lines of the second stanza, where the context is expanded. Then the form is continued throughout, for a pleasing effect of rhyme and rhythm.
“I’m going to like it here.
There is something about the place,
An encouraging atmosphere,
Like a smile on a friendly face.
There is something about the place,
So caressing and warm it is.
Like a smile on a friendly face,
Like a port in a storm it is.
So caressing and warm it is.
All the people are so sincere.
Like a port in a storm it is.
I am going to like here.
All the people are so sincere.
There’s especially one I like.
I am going to like here.
It’s the father’s first son I like.
There’s especially one I like.
There is something about his face.
It’s the father’s first son I like.
He’s the reason I love the place.
There is something about his face.
I would follow him anywhere.
If he goes to another place,
I am going to like it there.”
I offer you two other examples from A. E Stallings and Donald Justice
Another Lullaby for Insomniacs – BY A. E. STALLINGS
Sleep, she will not linger:
She turns her moon-cold shoulder.
With no ring on her finger,
You cannot hope to hold her.
She turns her moon-cold shoulder
And tosses off the cover.
You cannot hope to hold her:
She has another lover.
She tosses off the cover
And lays the darkness bare.
She has another lover.
Her heart is otherwhere.
She lays the darkness bare.
You slowly realize
Her heart is otherwhere.
There’s distance in her eyes.
You slowly realize
That she will never linger,
With distance in her eyes
And no ring on her finger.
Pantoum of the Great Depression – BY DONALD JUSTICE
Our lives avoided tragedy
Simply by going on and on,
Without end and with little apparent meaning.
Oh, there were storms and small catastrophes.
Simply by going on and on
We managed. No need for the heroic.
Oh, there were storms and small catastrophes.
I don’t remember all the particulars.
We managed. No need for the heroic.
There were the usual celebrations, the usual sorrows.
I don’t remember all the particulars.
Across the fence, the neighbors were our chorus.
There were the usual celebrations, the usual sorrows.
Thank god no one said anything in verse.
The neighbors were our only chorus,
And if we suffered we kept quiet about it.
At no time did anyone say anything in verse.
It was the ordinary pities and fears consumed us,
And if we suffered we kept quiet about it.
No audience would ever know our story.
It was the ordinary pities and fears consumed us.
We gathered on porches; the moon rose; we were poor.
What audience would ever know our story?
Beyond our windows shone the actual world.
We gathered on porches; the moon rose; we were poor.
And time went by, drawn by slow horses.
Somewhere beyond our windows shone the world.
The Great Depression had entered our souls like fog.
And time went by, drawn by slow horses.
We did not ourselves know what the end was.
The Great Depression had entered our souls like fog.
We had our flaws, perhaps a few private virtues.
But we did not ourselves know what the end was.
People like us simply go on.
We have our flaws, perhaps a few private virtues,
But it is by blind chance only that we escape tragedy.
And there is no plot in that; it is devoid of poetry.
This article on the pantoum will be updated based on your input and grow into an entry for our upcoming book.
Please write a pantoum of any length and link up below. Use the opportunity to read through the comments you receive, and edit if you would like to.
You are welcome to link up an old pantoum that you feel fits the prompt or you can take a favorite free verse poem and rewrite it as a pantoum.
If you like, it would be interesting if you added a short note about your thoughts when writing the pantoum. The comments will be a part of the book in the end.
Comment as usual and if you would like to receive constructive feedback on your poem please indicate that in your comments. If you ask for constructive feedback, be prepared to give back constructive feedback as well
If you would like to edit and improve your poem please update a new link in the Mr Linky below so it shows.
Welcome to the pub dear poets and readers.
I’m too late but I cannot miss this, Gina dear! 🙂 Thank you for awakening the writer in me. ❤
i am glad that beautiful writer is back, she has a mighty pen. so good to have you join in Rosie!
ahhhh. how i miss this! thank you, Gina!
Hi, Gina! Thank you for hosting this form. I went back to look at old pantoums I had written, and I discovered more than I remember–including the response to my first dVerse post of this year. I guess I like this form. 🙂
That is so cool Merril! to go back to your first post and see how your writing has developed. will be looking forward to your offering. a pleasure to be here among some brilliant poets! This form can grow on you for sure. it is very melodic and allows for a lot of expression. happy poeming and pantouming!
It is! It wasn’t my first post, it was my first official hosting dVerse for this year. 🙂 But I did go back to look at earlier pantoums, too.
my older pantoums were in my national language, it would have taken too much time to translate etc. a first post holds much significance.
Thank you for this challenging form Gina. I will be sharpening my pen so I can offer up a Pantoum.
hello Grace, the pantoum seemed overwhelming at first glance but it becomes so familiar after I started writing. let your words flow!
Hi Gina ~thank you for putting the pantoum into context! I love the idea of a wedding pantoum slam. I will look out my old ones ~and offer something new.
Hello Sarah! I love the idea of reworking older poems into this form, it becomes something new but with a deeper meaning. the poetry slam at weddings can get boisterous and quite raunchy too!! thank you for joining in the pantoum fun!
I’ve used an old one for this evening, but I’ll get around to writing a new one specially 🙂
lovely! am looking forward to reading yours in a bit, happy to see the pantoum has inspired more than one from you Jane!
Lots 🙂
Oh, I very much love the pantoum form! I shall find you an old one, and perhaps also try a new.
lovely to have you join us Rosemary! it is one of the more romantic forms. so looking forward to yours. the more the lovelier! an old one is quite precious. happy pantouming!
Ah well, I found only one old one after all, which I have linked. I might do some revising of it during the next four weeks. In any case will definitely be trying at least one new one.
great! will read as my day progresses, its early morning here and off to work in a bit. looking forward to it and more!
Thank you for hosting, Gina!
Well….here goes the confession! Although I’ve been with dVerse a number of years now….hosting too….the name of my blog says it all: home poet.
Never heard of a pantoum until your prompt. Forms are always a challenge for me — kind of like poetry sudoku!
It’ll take awhile before I post – and I need to catch up with reading too.
Bright sunny day here in Boston! A dusting of snow….
see you all on the sudoku trail 🙂
lovey to hear about the dusting of snow Lillian, as you know my passion for it though i live on the equator!! LOL!
i know the pantoum since childhood but only recently discovered it was also used in the poetry world outside of my home country. most forms get me in a tangle too but i love the challenge!
take your time, the pantoum looks difficult with all its constraints but it can become quite addictive, like sudoku maybe??!!
to me the best part of writing it, it has no meter! that really confuses me!
enjoy the sun and happy reading!
I DID IT!
And now….I shall go and relax and promise to catch up on all my reading in the AM — with a good strong cup of black coffee in my hands! 🙂
you aced it Lillian! hope the coffee is lovely in the morning!
Not one to pass up a challenge, I wrote a new one for this evening.
and always a lovely surprise when you do! thank you for taking part Jane
My pleasure, Gina 🙂
I have tried so many forms but the pantoum only once… I will need to write a new one and will join later… it’s been a very busy week including a concert tonigtht… but I have four weeks so I will come up with something
hope the concert will be loevly, maybe a pantoum will emerge from the musical offerings! this is a tricky form, one needs to be still with the poem and see that the theme flows throughout. but it is so satisfying once accomplished. looking forward to your offering. and it is a great idea to keep the prompt open for a longer period for these long forms.
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Thanks for hosting, Gina! I made an attempt. All the repetitions seem to get in the way but they give a nice sound to the form. I liked the simplicity of the Rogers and Hammerstein song.
that song is lovely isn’t it, plain and pure! yes the repetitions was like a little nag at first but it kept me focused on the theme which helped a lot. thank you for joining in Frank!
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thank you for linking and participating!
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keep on writing poets! i am off to work here in Malaysia but will be coming back to read as my day progresses, i see multiple contributions and my heart is palpating with excitement. this form is challenging but you all are responding with such strong pieces. amazing!
I re-worked one for tonight, but I’ll write a new one soon, too. 🙂
great Merril, your pantoum had lovely waves and rhyming lines
Thank you, Gina. 🙂
Hi Gina and All. Sorry I’m late to the party. Had to go out of town today and just getting home. Lots to read hear and a little nervous about pantoum. It looks like a lot of good information, which I’m about to read right now.
lovely to have you here Jade! never too late, we are having 4 weeks of rhyme with no meter just ruminating thoughts and sweet nothings! will look forward to reading your contribution! hope all is well with you,
Thank you very much. We’ll see what confections I can cook up! Yes, all is well, thank you for asking. No new snow and the roads out of town were clear.
glad you got home safe!
Thank you. Today was the first of the 3 trips made this week where I did. It was quite a relief.
I linked to one I just posted a week or so ago. I’d like to think I’ll have time to write another, but I doubt it. Thank you Gina for the excellent opportunity to exercise our poetics.
my pleasure and i love your enthusiasm to write another. this is not a popular form and admire you taking it up
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Thank you Gina for hosting. I will try to get myself into the mindset of constructing a pantoum, but it feels so forced and unnatural – I don’t ever like this. But for the sake of participation, I will give writing one a strong consideration. Thank you again Gina!
**ooops >. “I don’t ever THINK like this.”
i am more free verse myself but always love the challenge of a form, lots of time to ruminate and create yours Rob, will surely look forward to reading your lovely contribution.
Well Gina, I wrote and posted one, keeping my tongue planted firmly in my cheek.
haha I really enjoyed that one, it was a delight!
I have posted a new pair of pantoums, written in a Yin Yang reflection of each other.
awesome Rob! I am now back on the poetry trail and excited to read the recent contributions. Lovely ro have another pantoum from you!
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The pantoum is one of my fave forms……i shall be back!
wonderful! happy to have you join us, this is quite challenging form
Thank you, Gina, for a great description of this form! I don’t know if I got it totally correct since I had to change a few words here and there so the poem made sense instead of relying on puns or punctuation to change the sentence meaning. I do love how you can ruminate in an idea and slowly expand and move the idea a little ways (or a long ways). Thank you for this!
just read your pantoum Irma, it was very good, the change in the words were subtle enough not to be so striking and it flowed and kept to the subject mater, bringing it to the surface each time. that was important, well done! like how you also used Frank’s prompt as the inspiration of your ruminations! priceless!
Thank you!! Very humbled by your praise! Frank’s topic seemed to lend itself well to this form. I might try another! 😉
great Irma!!
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It’s a pantoum frenzy around here.
It is!
i went to bed dreaming of pantoums, Sarah has me wanting to sit and write, she is amazing!
She is!
you have me so excited! your pantoums are coming out strong and vibrant!
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Gina – I’ve been thinking about the Malaysian wedding pantoum and wondering if we could set something similar up online? Might be fun!
that sounds brilliant, though I have no idea how? like a pantoum/renga, a response quatrain. I would be very keen. brilliant and fun!
Yes, that sort of thing. I think if we could work out how to start it, we could carry it on somehow…
OK, how about I put up a link with lines A and C for the first stanza, and you can comment with lines B and D, and then I can take your B and D lines and do the next verse, etc? I’ll put it in Mr LInky as Sarah and Gina, and I’ll put an explanation in the post. We’ve got a month, so we can take it slowly. I thought we could use the ocean as a topic, as it works so well in a Pantoum? What do you think?
tat sounds great! and yes having the extra time helps. the ocean is a favourite topic, count me in!
Fab.
OK, it’s up! Let’s see how it goes. What’s the worst that can happen???
i am excited now! will take a look!
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One of my favorite forms! Thanks Gina. (K)
wonderful to know that! I look forward to reading your contribution, it is a melodic and artistic form, i can see why you would love it.
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Hello! I’m trying another one that is more true to form. This is getting more and more fun! 😁 Also enjoying all the responses from other poets. WP is giving me a hard time right now and keeps on closing when I try to comment. Maybe it’s just me? Apologies ahead of time if there are multiples of the same comment!
am glad you are enjoying it as i see some others are too, i hope to have more time to write another. keep it coming Irma, multiples add to the fun and silliness we need sometimes!
Yes! I think this form lends itself well to rumination and the cyclic nature of life. Please write another! You do this form so well!
thank you Irma. I have a few weeks more and hope to do so!
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Absolutely fascinating to read all of that.
thank you Paul, it is tricky form yet it can grow on you!
Yes, I sense that, thank you for the insights Gina.
my pleasure to have you read and ponder the form Paul
🙂
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This had my head spinning at first but it was fun once I got going. I’ve been stuck on starting poems lately, so I used a line from another one to start.
that is a good start Nora, the pantoum does grow on you and i am glad you persevered and found it fun!
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Here is my first pantoum. I’m grateful to Maggie at What rhymes with stanza? I read my first pantoum there, it was her own, and I really liked it. I just had to write mine today, during a long visit, in haste, while returning back here and to Maggie’s to check the rules. I have doubled checked and I hope I didn’t mess something up. A highly intriguing form.
I invite every kind of honest comment and I’ll reply too, honestly. Also, I’ll read as many of other people’s as possible. Thank you and welcome.
https://manjameximoving.wordpress.com/2019/03/03/pic-and-a-word-challenge-176-entangled-pantoum/
welcome and thank you for participating – am heading to your post now!
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That was a pretty fun form to dink about. 🙂
i am glad you had fun!
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We had to write a Pantoum for my creative writing course, It was very tricky. Here is one I wrote a little while ago about Time.
https://talesfromthemindofkristian.wordpress.com/2018/07/22/our-enemy-time-a-pantoum/
We also had to write a Villanelle and I found that form the hardest I’ve ever attempted. 🙂
oh the villanelle is very tough, i find the pantoum a little easier. glad you are joining us!
Thank you Gina 🙂
did you link it in Mr Linky for us to read?
Oh! I didn’t see the Mr Linky, I’ll go back and do that. 🙂
your pantoum is lovely Kristian and tackles a much loved subject – time – we do so take it for granted.
Yes, we all do. Thanks, Gina. 🙂
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Hi Gina, thanks for your really interesting verse form. Have managed to get one in before end of month this time but guess March is a long month! It has stirred up childhood memories and sounds rather than a nature poem too. Will check more out but really loved Kim’s from writing in Norfolk.
I am pleased it has stirred up those memories, pantoum works well with history and things we want to resolve. Kim is an amazing poet she really makes the words sing for us. Yes we have lots of time to write more and perfect our pantoums. happy to see you join us!
Ahh Gina, I am linked as Georgina. Is that your full name too?
I am just Gina. so lovely to know you are a Gina too! welcome to the pantoum! I will be visiting yours soonest I can. Lovely to have you join us!
Hi Gina, Georgina or Navasolanature here. You made some interesting comments on my Pantoum and I have tried a revised version with rhymes. I was going to re post it but think Mr Blenky has expired. 100 Pantoum, amazing stuff. It’s a great form and I hope to use it more now. Not sure whether my revision will come up under the links but would love you to see if the rhyming helps the meaning. Beautiful Spring here in UK now.
dear Georgina, yes Mr Linky is closed now but I will return to the links and they should reflect your most current edits. you could try to pingback in the comment of that post to add as reminder for all the dverse team to also view your pantoum. i will be coming back to the contributions in a few days.
so lovely to hear that you enjoyed this form, it is simple and yet allows the poet so much expression. i look forward to reading your newest version.
spring has sprung! this must be quite a joyful time for you in the UK, and i wish you many lovely days, the flowers must be so gorgeous now where you are.
Thanks Gina and for all the poetic work along with your medical challenges.
Finally linked up! Thanks for hosting this form Gina. I’ll go on the reading trail tomorrow – it being long past my bedtime!
hope you have rested well and ready to be amazed by our wonderful poets. I will continue my reading over the weekend as work is pretty hectic. I look forward to your contribution and lovely to have you with us!
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Hello Gina and fellow poets! I am posting a Pantoum I have been working on. enjoy.
lovely to have you join us Linda, I will back to reading in a little while, looking forward to reading yours soon
No worries.
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Thank you for posting this. It was very informative and a learning read.
thank you for stopping by, the pantoum is a lovely form, though tricky at first and seems so mathematical it really grows on you.
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I wasn’t sure the prompt was still open but, someone suggested I link up with my Pantoum, I will be around to read.
welcome! it is opened for a few more weeks till end of March, love to have you join us!
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Did u receive my poem?
Hi Paula. Did you link it to Mr Linky? All poems should show up there. I will have a look soonest I get home tonight. Thank you for participating
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Hi Gina, I linked it. – Paula
thank you Paula, i repaired the link as it wasn’t working at first! lovely to have you here!
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Hi Gina…finally dropping in to take up the challenge. I am working on an imperfect pantoum, but a little confused about the ending. Do I need to end with a couplet after the four stanzas, in order to complete the circle or can I just leave as is? Is there an example of a pantoum that ends with the couplet?
in the imperfect pantoum, the final stanza differs from the previous form, the second and fourth lines may be different from any preceding lines. Whichever form you chose, you may end with a rhymed couplet after the 3rd Stanza, it is not compulsory though. I cited the Pantoum of the Great Depression – BY DONALD JUSTICE which has an example of the pantoum ending with a couplet. I am so glad to read that you will be attempting this! Wishing you lots of fun!
Thanks for your response, Gina. I’m sorry but I must be missing the couplet. In that particular poem, is it the last line of the fourth stanza and then the single line at the end?
yes Mish, this was the only example I could find, I do think the single line could be read either way, as couplet on its own or paired with the last line of the 4th stanza.
Ok, thank you, Gina. I think I will leave mine as is and link it up. Please let me know if it does not conform to any necessary requirements for the form. I truly enjoyed working with the pantoum!
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very interesting form. I will definitely try it. Thanks for the post.
glad you enjoyed and looking forward to reading your contribution