Poetry Form
Finish the Line
Rime of the Ancient Mariner
"Am I Romantic?"
Meter Reader
100

The feeling a reader experiences as a result of tone.

Mood

100

"Rage, rage against the dying..."

"...of the light."

100

The book in which "Rime" first appeared.

The Lyrical Ballads

100

I value this over logic and reason in my works of art.

Emotion and feeling

100

The most common meter in the English language.

Iambic Pentameter

200

Language that appeals to any of the five senses. 

Imagery

200

"Quote the raven..."

"...nevermore."

200

Where the "...slimy things did crawl with legs/upon..."

The slimy sea

200

As opposed to the architecture and culture of a rapidly modernizing world, I harken back to this idealized time.

Middle Ages

200

A line of iambic tetrameter poetry consists of this.

Four feet of unstressed/stressed syllables. 

300

In poetry, when one line ends without punctuation.

Enjambment

300

"Anyone lived in a pretty how..."

"...town."

300

How the mariner keeps the wedding guest's attention after he lets go of him.

Holds him with a glittering eye (stare)

300
Although rejecting most organized religion, we often search for meaning through this, and represent it in art.

A higher spiritual power

300

Anapest octameter.

Eight feet of unstressed/unstressed/stressed.

400

The repetition of initial consonant sounds.

Alliteration

400

"The woods are lovely, dark and deep/but I've got..."

"...miles to go before I sleep/miles to go before I sleep."

400

How the mariner is able to cry out to the ghost ship.

Bites his arm and sucks the blood

400

I love this type of building style, named after invading Germanic tribes, and modeled after Medieval castles and cathedrals. 

Gothic
400

"Higher still and higher/From the earth thou springest/Like a cloud of fire;" has this many feet.

Trimeter

500

Poems written without a rhyming scheme.

Free verse

500

"I went out to a hazel wood/because a fire was in my head/and cut and peeled a hazel wand/and hooked a berry to a..."

...thread."

500

"He prayeth well, that..."

...loveth well."

500

Characters I write are generally impulsive and this, enabling them to speak with birds and bless sea snakes.

Illogical 

500
"Am not I/A fly like thee?/Or art not thou/A man like me?"

Iambic Dimeter

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