The iambic tetrameter is a unstressed word followed by a stressed word. It could represent the heatbeat
βHad we but world enough, and time, / This coyness, lady, were no crime.β / Thus begins Marvellβs verse, all sublime, / In iambic tetrameter it does rhyme.
To find metrical feet in poetry, count the number of syllables in each line and identify the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. In "Daffodils" by William Wordsworth, each line follows an iambic pattern (an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable). Since it has four iambs (tetrameter) per line, it is called iambic tetrameter.
WikiAnswers cannot write a poem for you. The examples in books are perfectly good examples to show you what iambic meter is.
Iambic pentameter
iambic pentameter :
The Jerry Springer Show - 1991 Get Rid of Your Mistress was released on: USA: 11 February 2010
The Jerry Springer Show - 1991 Mistress Mayhem was released on: USA: 31 October 2008
The Jerry Springer Show - 1991 MIstress Confronted was released on: USA: 23 February 2007
The Jerry Springer Show - 1991 More Mistress Mayhem was released on: USA: 13 October 2009
Attack of the Show - 2005 Mistress Justine Rainn Wilson was released on: USA: 31 March 2011
These lines from Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 are an example of paradox. The speaker is using a paradox to show that despite the unpleasant comparison of his mistress to perfume, there is still something delightful about her. The use of paradox adds complexity and depth to the speaker's feelings.
She lives in Toronto.
In English sonnets are most usually written in Iambic Pentameter: each line having ten syllables, with a stress on the even-number syllables: earth HATH not ANyTHING to SHOW more FAIR dull WOULD he BE of SOUL who COULD pass BY There are other possibilities. Many sonnets are written as Iambic Hexameter (twelve syllable lines - Sidney's 'Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show') and some in Iambic Tetrameter (Catherine Chandler's Oneironaut - "My shrink said lucid dreaming tames / Recurring nightmares! What the bleep .."). There are even trochaic sonnets. But Iambic Pentameter is by far the commonest metre in an English sonnet. (Different rhythms are the default option in other languages).