Welcome to dVerse, the poets’ pub! It’s always good to see you here.
Tonight we are looking at another form – the villanelle! I think it’s a beautiful form, but it has its challenges. Let me tell you a bit about my personal relationship with the villanelle, and something about its history and structure. I’ll throw in some examples along the way.
It turns out I loved a villanelle before I ever heard of it as a form. I stopped doing Eng Lit when I was 16, and never encountered villanelles before that. I didn’t read much poetry – I was doing sciences, and then went off to medical school, where I had much more exciting things to do. I still scribbled a bit, in secret, obviously.
Some amazing genius had the idea of putting poetry on the London Underground which is how I came to meet this poem:
One Art
The art of losing isn’t hard to master;
so many things seem filled with the intent
to be lost that their loss is no disaster.
Lose something every day. Accept the fluster
of lost door keys, the hour badly spent.
The art of losing isn’t hard to master.
Then practice losing farther, losing faster:
places, and names, and where it was you meant
to travel. None of these will bring disaster.
I lost my mother’s watch. And look! my last, or
next-to-last, of three loved houses went.
The art of losing isn’t hard to master.
I lost two cities, lovely ones. And, vaster,
some realms I owned, two rivers, a continent.
I miss them, but it wasn’t a disaster.
—Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture
I love) I shan’t have lied. It’s evident
the art of losing’s not too hard to master
though it may look like (Write it!) like disaster.
This spoke to me so powerfully, at a time when I was away from home, finding out who I really was, doing all that young adult stuff. I still love it as a poem. I had no idea it was a villanelle, but I loved the repetition and the pattern of it.
When my granny died, I read a poem at her funeral. Turns out I chose a “demi” villanelle:
JEWELS IN MY HAND
Sasha Moorsom (1931-1993)
I hold by dead friends like jewels in my hand
Watching their brilliance gleam against my palm
Turquoise and emerald, jade, a golden band
All ravages of time they can withstand
Like talismans their grace keeps me from harm
I hold dead friends like jewels in my hand
I see them standing in some borderland
Their heads half-turned, waiting for my arm
Turquoise and emerald, jade, a golden band
I’m not afraid they will misunderstand
My turning to them like a magic charm
I hold my dear friends like jewels in my hand
Turquoise and emerald, jade, a golden band.
Again, I loved the repetition and the structure. This is still one of my favourite poems.
I didn’t find out what a villanelle really was until I started my poetry blog, specifically to do NaPoWriMo (coming up next month!). Interestingly, the villanelle was originally a pastoral poem with no fixed structure. It wasn’t until the 1600s that the form became fixed. It’s been in and out of fashion, and reached a peak of popularity in the 1980s and 90s thanks to New Formalism. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Formalism)
This is what Wikipedia says about the form:
A villanelle (also known as villanesque)[1] is a nineteen-line poetic form consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain. There are two refrains and two repeating rhymes, with the first and third line of the first tercet repeated alternately until the last stanza, which includes both repeated lines. The villanelle is an example of a fixed verse form. The word derives from Latin, then Italian, and is related to the initial subject of the form being the pastoral.
I’m not sure how helpful that is. I’ll translate:
A villanelle has 19 lines – 5 three line stanzas and a final four line stanza. It has a definite rhyme and repeating structure. Let me demonstrate with one of my own:
A1 The tastes of summer float upon the breeze,
b Look, and you’ll find them, here among
A2 The tang of berries, ripped up basil leaves:
a Lick salty skin from playing in the sea’s
b Wild rolling waves the whole day long –
A1 The tastes of summer float upon the breeze –
a Picnics laid out beneath green shading trees,
b Faint woodsmoke tang, that floats and weaves among
A2 The tang of berries, ripped up basil leaves –
a Vanilla kisses soothing grass-scratched knees,
b Wild thyme, the flavour of a sky lark’s song,
A1 The tastes of summer float upon the breeze –
a Pods popping, bright green shiny peas
b Bounce on your palm, and roll upon your tongue,
A2 The tang of berries, ripped up basil leaves.
a Relish it all, before the summer leaves,
b Flavours fade quickly, and the nights grow long,
A1 The tastes of summer float upon the breeze,
A2 The tang of berries, ripped up basil leaves.
It’s acceptable to modify the repeated lines a little – look at Elizabeth Bishop’s poem for an example of this.
If you want some more examples, have a look at the Poetry Foundation website. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/learn/glossary-terms/villanelle
And as a final treat, here’s Leonard Cohen and Villanelle for our time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UzvVOy0Dq8
This is a month long prompt, so there’s time to get feedback and revise. Here’s what to do:
- Write a villanelle (!)
- Post it on Mr Linky – click on the link below to add your name and enter the direct URL to your poem.
- On your blog, please provide a link back to dVerse. This enables others to enjoy our prompts, and grows our readership.
- Read some villanelles, written by your fellow dVerse poets – and give them feedback – that’s how we learn and grow.
- If you promote your poem on social media, please use the tag #dversepoets
- Enjoy poetry – writing and reading!
This is a lovely poetry form. Thank you Sarah for hosting and looking forward to reading your villanelle.
Grace, my comment disappeared at your blog, but I love the way you start out with Spring as a mirage and by the end you are in the middle of it. Such a lovely villanelle.
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Good evening all and thank you, Sarah, for hosting and making the villanelle beautifully clear. I hope I’ve managed the form the first time round – it took me three tries to get the pantoum right!
Welcome everyone! I’m just back from an unexpected run. Looking forward to a month of glorious villanelle 😊
Hello Sarah and All. Villanelle looks challenging but worth the effort, as shown by your examples. It’s sunny and warm here today, a perfect day to get started on a villanelle! Your outline will be very helpful thank you.
For me, the key to the villanelle is a big list of rhymes. Be canny about the words you pick. Don’t base it on “seven” or “chocolate” or you will break your heart over it. Good luck. I’m looking forward to seeing your poem(s?) this month.
Sarah I took Victoria’s advice from a few weeks back and used rhymezone before I ever got going. Your reminder was appreciated. I finished it and like how it turned out but, as always, am open to any feedback anyone cares to give ❤
A l9vely firm and I did one the last time we had this firm a couple of years back. I always call it a villain Nell. Good luck to you all! I will be passing this form by. Thank you Sarah for your lovely examples.
As usual my spell check sighed. Lovely form s what I meant to say.
If you change your mind, we’re here all month… 😎
Have we got a month to write one then? Phew! I do like yours with all its colours and flavours, especially the ripped up basil leaves.
Yes, it’s open all month. Relax! 😉
Oh, I will now. I wouldn’t have slept tonight 🙂
I’m glad I saved you from a sleepless night!
I did sleep not too bad last night, really. Maybe it was preying on my mind…
Hello Sarah, I will post my Villanelle later. We went to a concert tonight, and it will be too late tonight to write
There’s no rush. Maybe you’ll get to do more than one over the month…
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Thank you for hosting, Sarah. I just got home–show and wine–so not up for writing. This form definitely takes some careful thought. 🙂
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I have always loved Villanelles. Thanks for sharing these excellent examples and for hosting, Sarah!
I haven’t written one in a very long time — perhaps I will try it out again and see if it works. 🙂
Oh, yes, you should. I’m looking forward to it already.
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For now I’ve revised one that was for a prompt you did. 🙂 I will definitely try writing more though. It is a beautiful form.
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Hi Sarah- thanks for hosting. I’m posting one today. I went back and looked and I’ve not written many Villanelles, but looking forward to the challenge!
Thanks for hosting Sarah. Just for fun, I went with a combination of horror and humor for this villanelle. Hope it is enjoyable.
This form scares me most of all…even the sestina! Not sure why.
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It’s ages since I attempted a villanelle, and even then it was seldom. I’m glad of the opportunity to have another try – or several tries. (I have one from 3 years ago I’d love to include, but is that allowed?)
love your personal share Sarah and the advice on rhymes i read in the comments, i must confess, the villanelle is a form i really struggle with the most, i can’t seem to wrap the lines around a theme, will be coming back to challenge myself in a few days, thank you for hosting and guiding us!!
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I haven’t tried a villanelle in a long time. I may be rusty. Thank you for sharing this prompt.
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Your villanelle examples are very varied and challenging. The one you read for your grandmother is so moving. Am inspired and linked up now. Thanks for all your stuff to stir us!
Not sure how this pingback works https://navasolanature.wordpress.com/2019/04/01/daffodils-in-a-garden-for-peace/
Is that it? Need to sleep though. Catch up tomorrow!
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Thank you for hosting this lovely prompt Sarah, it’s been at least twenty years since I wrote my last Villanelle so am a bit rusty! I’ve linked one I wrote earlier today and will swing by later to read xxx
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Oh, this took me a while to warm up to (along with a push from Na/GloPoWriMo.) Thank you for the nudge that got me to finally try this form.
I’m glad you gave it a go. I’ll be catching up on reading over the weekend 😊
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This is a wonderful villanelle collection. I will be catching up with you over the weekend.
Thank you, Sarah. I enjoy the villanelle and find it kind of a haunting form. 😮
My pingback yesterday did not seem to work, or I can’t find it:
https://myforever.blog/2019/04/08/villanelle-poetry-a-view-of-todays-world/
This was a challenge but fun! Thank you!
I’ve added a second villanelle and will swing by over the weekend to catch up on all the reading xxx
I am a bit late but, I will be around to read. I may post an older one as well as it is one of my favorites.
Sliding in touching the goal post – just! Will catch up on reading the other work.
One last one–quickly written, but putting it here anyway. 🙂
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