The sestina is a strict ordered form of poetry, dating back to twelfth century French troubadours. It
consists of six six-line (sestets) stanzas followed by a three-line envoy. Rather than use a rhyme
scheme, the six ending words of the first stanza are repeated as the ending words of the other five
stanzas in a set pattern. The envoy uses two of the ending words per line, again in a set pattern.
First stanza, ..1 ..2 ..3 ..4 ..5 ..6
Second stanza, ..6 ..1 ..5 .. 2 ..4 ..3
Third stanza, ..3 ..6 ..4 ..1 ..2 ..5
Fourth stanza, ..5 ..3 ..2 ..6 ..1 ..4
Fifth stanza, ..4 ..5 ..1 ..3 ..6 ..2
Sixth stanza, ..2 ..4 ..6 ..5 ..3 ..1
Concluding tercet:
middle of first line ..2, end of first line ..5
middle of second line ..4, end of second line..3
middle if third line ..6, end of third line ..1
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Sestina -
it consumes your thoughts and enters your dreams
all of your life, you thought you would get it -
I thought I was the lucky one
I always had a buck or two45 lines, 9 comments, on Apr 14 12:19 AM 2007. In Sestina -
Tiger poem number two.
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Sestina -
Desire / Acrostic Sestina
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acrostic, sestina with rictameter
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Acrostic rhyming Sestina with internal rhyme45 lines, 16 comments, on Nov 25 8:03 PM 2007. In Thoughts, holliday sestina
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