Who invented the five-element poem in America?

American poet Adelaide Crapsey (1878–1914) wrote a simple blank five-line poem inspired by Japanese poems such as haiku. Each line has 2-4-6-8-2 syllables and 22 syllables. This is called the traditional five-line poem, which was later popularized by the works of other American poets such as Carl Sandberg. For example, Crapsey's five-line poem "Trichord":

these are

Three silent things:

Snowflakes falling ... on the hour

Before dawn ... a man's mouth

Just dead.

A judge who doubts your fate

Weaken.

Later, someone developed a simpler five-line poem style, called modern five-line poem:

1 noun = the title of a poem

Two adjectives related to the topic

Three verbs related to the topic

A short sentence consisting of four words to further elaborate the theme.

1, get back to the point.