Early in The Morning: A Collection of New Poems - Poems: With A Few Structural Notations

Poems: With A Few Structural Notations

"Early in the Morning" - iambic trimeter (excepting line 7 which is anapestic tetrameter)
"I Went to Santa Barbara"
"John Clark"
"Spin Me a Web, Spider"
"Tommy Hyde" - music by Anthony Castro
"One for the Man"
"Mrs McPhee" - accentual meter, two beats per line
"There Was an Old Woman" - catalectic anapestic tetrameter
"Daniel Brent"
"Freddie Phipps"
"Charity Chadder"
"Jeremiah"
"High on the Wall" - music by Anthony Castro
"Wilbur"- music by Anthony Castro - timed meter, two beats per line
"My Cat Plumduff"
"The Owl Looked out of the Ivy Bush"
"Ring Dove"
"Baby, Baby" - music by Anthony Castro
"At Linkinhorne"
"In My Garden"
"Foxglove"
"Stone in the Water" - music by Anthony Castro
"Round the Corner Comes Jack Fall" - music by Anthony Castro
"Said the Clown"
"Janny Jim Jan" - music by Anthony Castro
"Mistletoe" - music by Anthony Castro
"Balloono" - music by Anthony Castro
"Take Me to the Water Fair" - music by Anthony Castro
"Rebekah" - music by Anthony Castro
"Nicholas Naylor" - music by Anthony Castro
"John, John the Baptist" - music by Anthony Castro
"Tell, Tell the Bees" - music by Anthony Castro
"Johnny Come Over the Water" - music by Anthony Castro
"I Love My Darling Tractor" - music by Anthony Castro
"Let's Go Ride" - music by Anthony Castro
"Here's Reverend Rundle"
"The Money Came in, Came in" - music by Anthony Castro
"Good Morning, Mr. Croco-doco-dile" - music by Anthony Castro
"When I Was a Boy" - music by Anthony Castro
"I Am the Song" - iambic tetrameter, nonce poem

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Famous quotes containing the word structural:

    The reader uses his eyes as well as or instead of his ears and is in every way encouraged to take a more abstract view of the language he sees. The written or printed sentence lends itself to structural analysis as the spoken does not because the reader’s eye can play back and forth over the words, giving him time to divide the sentence into visually appreciated parts and to reflect on the grammatical function.
    J. David Bolter (b. 1951)