pastrojien
Pastrojien is a term used to describe a distinctive type of poetic form that emerged in the late 19th century within the Austro‑Hungarian Empire. The form is characterized by its use of free but highly structured meter, typically employing an iambic flow that alternates between lines of eight and six syllables in a rhythmic pattern. Each stanza usually contains seven lines, and the final line is an anthemic couplet that recapitulates the central theme. Pastrojien poems are often written in a colloquial register yet maintain a lyrical quality that lends itself to musical adaptation.
The term originated from a literary circle in Vienna, where the poet Johann Pastermann coined the word
In contemporary literature, pastrojien is often studied as an example of early modernist experimentation with metrical