New Form โ€“ Quadrille Quaiku: Day 13 of National Poetry Month

Apr 13, 2026 | Poetry, Writing

Day 13: National Poetry Month

Quadrille Quaiku

My friend, the poet and photographer David Hoffman, invented a new poetry form, the Quadrille Quaiku. The rules are deceptively simple. According to David:

The Quadrille Quaiku consists of four linked haiku or senryu. The four linked poems form a single poem. Each of the four stanzas is a Quarter Quadrille Quaiku [which David previously invented].

โ€‹Each of the four poems meets the following format:
  • Each stanza may be either a haiku or a senryu
  • 3 lines per stanza
  • 5/7/5 syllable count
  • The total word count for each stanza is 11 words
  • The four stanzas combined total 44 words.

I thought this sounded diabolical, but of course I had to try it. I didnโ€™t realize I beat him to the punch! The following is, apparently, the first-ever Quadrille Quaiku, but David quickly responded to mine with one of his own.

Mine

sesquipedalian
forms on tiny feet, each beat
kicks my ample ass
poetry puzzles
plink, plunk, words fall into place
silent, gracelessly
senryuโ€™s a sin,
but worse to mangle haiku โ€”
unnatural crime
shun me, lock me up
let me return to sonnets
pentametrically.

Davidโ€™s Response (โ€œSENRYU 0494โ€)

call me a sinnerโ€”
a sweet senryu loverโ€”
syllables swoon me
โ€‹
I did not sonnet
now innumerable bees
still plague her bonnet
โ€‹
cultured poets write
words I have not even heardโ€”
syllables swooning
โ€‹
unnatural crime
to shun meโ€” then lock me up
senryu swooning
ยฉ Copyright David Hoffmann 2026 โ€“ All Rights Reserved

Other National Poetry Month Posts

Your Turn!

Can you resist a silly challenge when a gauntletโ€™s thrown at your virtual feet?

Holly Jahangiri

Holly Jahangiri is the author of Trockle, illustrated by Jordan Vinyard; A Puppy, Not a Guppy, illustrated by Ryan Shaw; and the newest release: A New Leaf for Lyle, illustrated by Carrie Salazar.

She draws inspiration from her family, from her own childhood adventures (some of which only happened in her overactive imagination), and from readers both young and young-at-heart. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband, J.J., whose love and encouragement make writing books twice the fun.

1 Comment

  1. Erin Penn

    A tree branch reaching
    To the ice sun, dark and white
    Wearing winter’s coat.
    A tree branch shaking
    In the surprise rain, blooming
    Pink petals tumbling.
    A tree branch gossiping
    With busy breeze ‘midst green leaves
    Summertime slander.
    A tree branch drooping,
    To gravity’s demand, fruit
    Within easy reach.

    DRAT – forgot the 11 word rule. Need to retry.

    Reply

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