“Five lines, focused light—precision of image and sound.”
| Title | Author | Type of Poem |
|---|---|---|
| 'Y' Are The Maiden Posies | Louisa May Alcott | Cinquain |
| A Portrait | Emily Elizabeth Dickinson | Cinquain |
| Cyclamen | Robert Fuller Murray | Cinquain |
| Dilly Dally | Madison Julius Cawein | Cinquain |
| Excelsior | Ralph Waldo Emerson | Cinquain |
| Lines On The Death Of A Farmer's Wife. | James McIntyre | Cinquain |
| My Suit | Madison Julius Cawein | Cinquain |
| Sea Calm | Langston Hughes | Cinquain |
| Sweet Little Fairy, | Eugene Field | Cinquain |
| The Fate Of The Flimflam | Eugene Field | Cinquain |
A **cinquain** is a five-line poem prized for concentration and clarity. In English, it often follows the American syllabic pattern popularized by Adelaide Crapsey, but there are flexible variants used in classrooms and contemporary practice.
Common approaches and features:
2 / 4 / 6 / 8 / 2.
Variants sometimes use 3/5/7/9/3 or loosen counts slightly.
The cinquain’s small frame invites exactness—each line a step that sharpens the image and lands with a clean, memorable close.