Yes, IV is my favorite. It seems the meter I've come to think in has been hendecasyllabic, like that of Dante.
A couple more in that meter:
VII: Out of Hell I Make Heaven
"Il faut cultiver notre jardin," he ends.
Behold, Epicurus, thy doctrine in French!
Our nature is Eden, all knowledge is death.
Negation defines every truth, every breath.
Reduction, Aquinas, straight to the absurd.
The prima of causa is only a word!
"By means of a faculty," morals, old Kant?
A truth beyond language is all that we want.
Alas, only facts, only science's Muse,
Who measures this cosmos for us to abuse,
Illusions of godhood since Eve ate that fruit,
And carnal desire to all knowledge took root.
Yet knowledge needs something unchanging to be,
Lest Chaos blight meaning, release energy,
The Will to build bridges o'er Heraclite's stream,
Defiance of time and the hypocrites' dream.
Now gather the tyrants, historical lords,
Who read carpe diem and earned their rewards,
If famous or infamous, fame still endures,
The Florentine dignity to you restores.
These hendecasyllables falsely doth freeze
My thoughts like a horse on the Parthenon frieze,
Forever a photograph, marble or ink,
The symbols imposed when I will myself think.
VI: Hexentanz
Abstractions, distractions and zealous contraptions,
Inventions of fear that empower the weak,
Of those whose own reason's the price of assurance,
To raise to divinity words, only words.
Lord Time is the master, and hist'ry his Word.
From chaos creation, from order stagnation,
A death of the spirit, no love and no strife.
Why not Dionysus once dead now reborn?
A tragedy, comedy, satyr-play life.
The panpipes resound o'er the narthex and nave.
All music, like language, the taming of chaos
To patterns, illusions of essence sans time.
What's human? A word from the Latin for dirt.
What's nature? A will to potestas/Macht/power.
Republics and empires but castles of sand,
By oceans of Chronos the tide will come in.
What's that? Worship nothing?! What better a king?
The means of production is all that I need.
Producing we're godlike, the coiners of words,
The masters of meaning who rule o'er the weak.