NARRATOR: For her alexandrine, Rani has chosen to double up on her masculine rhymes and write in spicy dactylic hexameter as opposed to iambic pentameter. With 8 stanzas, it’s also a very long alexandrine.
[PETER and MARIE stop by RANI‘s station, where RANI is preparing her stanzas for composition.]
PETER: Classical alexandrines are always rhymed in couplets alternating masculine rhymes and feminine rhymes. I see you’ve got two masculine rhymes together there.
RANI: Yes, well, I’m writing mine as more of a fusion, with some spice from a Spanish alejandrino.
PETER: You’ve set yourself up a challenge there, it’ll be difficult to get the syllables right. If you’re not careful, you’ll get soggy syllables especially near the end of your stanzas.
[MARIE points at RANI‘s unfinished stanzas.]
MARIE: I see you’re using dactylic pentameter instead of iambic hexameter. Any reason?
RANI: It’ll be faster for me to compose, so I can get all the stanzas ready and set before time runs out.
MARIE: It’s a challenging poem you’re writing here, but if you pull it off, I think the results may be quite scrummy.
RANI: Thank you.