The Moose of Peanut-Plants

The Moose of Peanut-plants is a reflective poetic form intended to express pleasure with Ivaletha, originating in The Unheeded Courageous Plump-Helmet-Fungi. The form guides poets during improvised performances. The poem is a single couplet. Use of vivid imagery is characteristic of the form. A form of parallelism is common throughout the poem, in that certain lines use the same placement of allusions. Each line has seven syllables. Every line of the poem has an initial caesura. The ending of each line of the poem shares the same rhyme. The second line of the couplet is required to maintain the phrasing of the first line. The first line must make use of simile. The second line must make use of simile.

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