And now for something a bit more challenging...
Glosa
One of my favorite types of poems. The challenge is to identify a poem you like, on RB, one of your own, or a published piece and use four lines of it to create a glosa poem. Now, since you might not know what a glosa is... here is some reading.
WHAT IS A GLOSA POEM?
The Glosa was used by poets of the Spanish court and dates back to the late 14th and early 15th century. For some reason, it has not been particularly popular in English. A search of the Internet search will uncovered a meager number of brief references to the form. From the limited information it is learned that the traditional structure has two parts. The first part is called the texte or cabeza. It consists of the first few lines (usually four) or the first stanza (usually a quatrain) from a well-known poem or poet. It has become permissible to use lines from a less well-known poet, or even from ones own verse.
The second part is the glose or glosa proper. This is a “gloss on,” an expansion, interpretation or explanation of the texte. The formal rule describes the glosa as consisting of four ten-line stanzas, with the consecutive lines of the texte being used as the tenth line (called the glossing) of each stanza. Furthermore, lines six and nine must rhyme with the borrowed tenth. Internal features such as length of lines, meter and rhyme are at the discretion of the poet.
*source
Feel free to post your attempt in this thread as well as in Poetic Scriptures for some feedback.
I'll start it off so you can see what I mean.
enjoy!