Hello everyone! I am excited to share this new poetry form.
The English Madrigal is one of many varieties of the Italian madrigal, an early lyric form that began as a pastoral song. Medieval author and poet Geoffrey Chaucer (The Canterbury Tales) defined the rules of the madrigal in English, which include a number of formal requirements, including meter, end rhyme, and several repeated refrains. Some of the best-regarded English language madrigals are those of Scottish poet William Drummond, who wrote eighty madrigals in his collection Poems (1616).
Key Features of the English Madrigal
Content: Often includes a theme of love
Structure of an English madrigal
*Usually written in iambic pentameter.
*Comprised of three stanzas: a tercet, quatrain, and sestet.
*All three of the lines in the opening tercet are refrains.
Form: A thirteen-line form in three stanzas:
Stanza 1] Tercet -Three lines
Stanza 2] Quatrain – Four lines
Stanza 3] Sestet – Six lines
Rhyme and Refrain
An English Madrigal
[L1] A (refrain 1)
[L2] B1 (refrain 2)
[L3] B2 (refrain 3)
[L4] a
[L5] b
[L6] A (refrain 1)
[L7] B1 (refrain 2)
[L8] a
[L9] b
[L10] b
[L11] A (refrain 1)
[L12] B1 (refrain 2)
[L13] B2 (refrain 3)
Here is my poem:
Widow’s Last Winter
by Grace Guevara
Death – come & cover me – burs & soft twine
Turning feet to plum, bones to earth – bury
My face under orchid’s sun, wild cherry
My body is bent tree, crowing to wind
Pining to fly & ride the last ferry
Death – come & cover me – burs & soft twine
Turning feet to plum, bones to earth – bury
This weighted sadness, blue trimmed with iced-rime
Spinning legs more than I care to carry
Recalling a love, sweet as mulberry
Death – come & cover me – burs & soft twine
Turning feet to plum, bones to earth – bury
My face under orchid’s sun, wild cherry
****
Sources: Poet’s Collective Writer’s Digest
The challenge is to write an English Madrigal poetry form following the rhyme scheme as described above.
New to dVerse? Here’s how to join in:
*Write a 13-line English Madrigal poem in response to the challenge.
*Enter a link directly to your poem and your name by clicking Mr. Linky below
and remember to check the little box to accept the use/privacy policy.
*You will find links to other poets and more will join so please do check
back later in order to read their poems.
*Read and comment on other poets’ work–we all come here to have our poems read.
*Please link back to dVerse from your site/blog.
Hi everyone! I hope you are having a good day. Certainly warmer than where I am with -10C.
We have hot tea, coffee and chocolates to go along with freshly baked pies and buttered croissants. I look forward to reading your poems.
Hi Grace! Thanks for hosting.❤️
Hi Melissa. Welcome. And thankfully my internet at home is back so I can visit and read poems. Take care!
Good evening poets, and thank you, Grace for hosting with a madrigal; we used to sing madrigals at school, back in the day. I’m feeling a little better today, but still off food, so a hot fruit tea would be lovely, please.
Hello Kim. I hope you feel better. Sharing with you a hot fruit tea. Thank you for sharing that bit of singing madrigals at school. Take care!
Thank you so much, Grace.
Grace,
What a great form. I like how musical it is in repetition and form. I look forward to reading what is shared.
Hi Ali. The repetition makes it easier I think though the rhyme format can be tricky. Thanks for dropping by!
great form and fun vibe with this prose
Yes! Thanks for dropping by.
🙂
Thanks so much Grace…at first felt the challenge was above me, fought with it a bit, but in the end really enjoyed the learning experience…am finding this site therapeutic when dwelling a bit on things in the recent past, so another layer of thanks, though of course is the same for all I would imagine. And a lovely hot tea, cold brew coffee and a pint of stout if there is one left, hope so…as one likes to not drink the bar dry after all…
Hi Ain! Poetry writing and reading is therapy, smiles. Love that you find these challenges fun and a brain twister too. Sharing with you hot tea, cold brew coffee and a pint of stout. Also just want to say Ain that commenting in your blog is a bit of challenge too. My comments may not publish but wanted to say that your poem moves me. Thank you for sharing them.
Thank you…oh no …about the blog….will look into that…
Hi Grace. What a lovely form. Thanks for hosting.
Hi Punam! A challenging and lovely form, I agree. Thanks for joining in.
Hi Grace! Thanks for hosting and for this “tricky” form. Going to take me a while I suspect. I would love a mug of coffee, [maybe two] and do you by chance have a smidge of real creme? And a piece of pie .. your choice.
Hi Helen. Happy to share with you coffee with creme and an apple pie. Looking forward to your poem. Have a good night.
Good Evening – This was a challenging prompt but, I decided to give it a whirl.
Good evening Truedessa! Indeed a challenging form. Thanks for joining in.
Beautifully done. I especially love your refrains..the burs and soft twine a brilliant phrase.
Thank you. I look forward to reading your madrigal poem.
Good morning, Grace! The prompts always arrive for me mid-evening and with one as challenging as this, I had to sleep on it but tumbling straight out of bed is my best time to write so now I am ready for a bracing cup of coffee please before catching up on commenting on the weeks offerings…
Hi Andrew! Best time for me to write for me is early morning. I will join you for warm cup of coffee. Thanks for joining in.
Hi Grace, wow what a challenge, but also fun to have a go, thank you. I need a whiskey! 😀
Hi Paul. Indeed a challenging but fun poetry form. Whiskey for you. It took me quite a bit too to write to the form. Have a good weekend.!
🙂 you too
Hello Grace and All. TGIF! My mind was fried yesterday. So happy I chose to wait until today to write, as I had a chance to read Anne’s story this morning (more about that at the poem.) Grace, thank you for introducing me to this wonderful form. Will definitely be using it again.
Hello Lisa. Happy Friday. Looking forward to reading your poem. Have a good weekend.
❤
thank you for this challenge– allowing me to pen a love poem to my husband. ❤
David, if you see this, I was unable to leave a comment at your poem. Here is my comment:
Hoping that he may get lost in the loving faces of those there with him and think no more.
Hello, Grace! It was hard to write in this form, I admit, but I’m happy with my poem, so thanks for the prompt! I wasn’t able to link the poem as the Linky has expired, maybe I’ll link it up in next OLN.
https://septemberhearttohearts.wordpress.com/2025/02/24/english-madrigal-the-farewells/
Here I;m leaving a link to my poem, for those who want to read it, please do.