As I lay on my duster, watching the big Montana sky
Like I have so many nights before, watching the time carve by
I know that this cattle drive, was worth all the time of the run
But on nights likes these, no nights like these are never any fun
The ambiance of a crystal clear night, I cannot deny
As I lay on my duster, watching the big Montana sky
But all my thoughts now turn to you, as I watch the campfire
Each flame a flimsy copy, of you when filled with desire
Those jolts of emerald flashes, which herald your fluid moods
How well I’ve learned to read them, the bad, the ugly and the good
As I lay on my duster, watching the big Montana sky
My longing for your touch is so deep, I damn well want to cry
I squeak out a prayer to the heavens, that you still feel the same
Upon my return to you, I shall ask you to share my name
In the meantime, the thoughts of your dew soft skin just get me by
As I lay on my duster, watching the big Montana sky
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Welcome students! – Today’s form is the Quartern.
The quatern is yet another French form. It consists of four stanzas of four lines, or sixteen total lines. The quatern is a syllabic form, meaning that there are a required number of syllables per line. Traditionally there are eight (8) syllables per line (or tetrameter, to those who want to get all technical), but it does NOT have to be iambic!! (Yes, I took very creative license by using fifteen syllables in my example above.)
The other trait of the quatern is that there is a repeating refrain, similar to a kyrielle. In this case, the refrain is repeated one line lower in the poem in each stanza until in the fourth stanza it’s the fourth line, like below…
Line 1 (refrain)
Line 2
Line 3
Line 4
Line 5
Line 1 again (Line 6)
Line 7
Line 8
Line 9
Line 10
Line 1 again (Line 11)
Line 12
Line 13
Line 14
Line 15
Line 1 again (Line 16)
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