It occurred to me that the word poem does not actually have a rhyme. Ironic, isn't it?
2 syllables:bro hymn, ho hum, know him, loham, low hum, pro-am, show him, spoem, throw him
3 syllables:below him, roboam
4 syllables:jeroboam, rehoboam
Meh. Take away the ancient kings and all you have are weird combo words and sorta rhymes. As example, RhymeZone shows that no less a person than Oliver Wendell Holmes resorted to a near-rhyme for "The Iron Gate":
Where all goes wrong, and nothing as it ought?Old age, the graybeard! Well, indeed, I know him,--Shrunk, tottering, bent, of aches and ills the prey;In sermon, story, fable, picture, poem,
It's not bad, but there's still something imperfect about it, more suited for light verse than anything serious. That's okay for a trash poet like me, who just diddles with words for laughs, but Ollie W. was a pretty serious guy. "Poem" is not "pohim." It's not quite Tom Lehrer rhyming Harvard with disCARvard, but it's in the same zip code.
I like to play with the rules themselves rather than just look the other way. If you've hung around this drugstore for a while you know that I wrote a poem about eye rhymes (words that look like they should rhyme but don't) and words with silent letters, as well as verbs that defy reason and words with very few rhymes. My favorite may be my ode to Wile E. Coyote, though.
Rather than follow a standard rhyme scheme like A/B/A/B or A/B/C/B, I wanted to simulate the chaos of a Looney Tunes cartoon, where the storytellers follow a structure but all within is crazy. This was my rhyme scheme:
ABCCDDEFGGEBFAII
Every line has a line that rhymes, but most of them are not where they ought to be. I'm not sure it succeeded, and may have just confused people, but I was happy when I was finished.
Surely, not since the time of RoboamHath been such a wackadoodle poem
Roboam: "You can say that again!" |
P.S.: Those who remember H.R. Pufnstuf might be interested to know that RhymeZone came up with a scant few rhymes for orange, which are even worse than the ones for poem. However, Witchiepoo was wrong; there ain't no rhyme for oranges.
3 comments:
Bravo, Fred
And submitted for your approval: 'phloem' (pronounced flow-em) and which is "the living tissue in vascular plants that transports the soluble organic compounds made during photosynthesis", per Wikipedia.
I tried to write a tiny poem
about a vital tissue
that grows in plants, we call it phloem
and no, I wouldn't dish you.
They said that I just couldn't write
A story or a poem
But I will try with all my might
And then I'll surely show 'em!
PLW, I suppose you're right, but this would be even worse than the preponderance of "glove" in songs about "love." And Stiiv, you're playing right into the hands of Big Poem!
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