I think Ann, Roger, and John all gave very good answers, Janice, so you are not alone in being helpful. I waited to write because I share their bafflement as to what is being asked. (If you don't want to be thought of as unfriendly, don't be unfriendly, dear Janice. Better an unscolded miscreant than a scolded innocent, no?)
If the question is what poems have been written in nonce forms, that requires research. Look at Donne and Tennyson and Barnes and Hardy and everyone. There is, too, the
Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics for starters. Paul Fussell's
Poetic Meter and Poetic Form. But read poems and think about them.
Here is Paul Valéry:
Sometimes I am the kind of man who, if he met the inventor of the sonnet in the underworld, would say to him with great respect (if there is any left, in the other world):
“My dear colleague, I salute you most humbly. I do not know the worth of your verses, which I have not read […]; but however bad they are, however flat, insipid, shallow, stupid, and naively made they may be, I still hold you in my heart above all other poets on earth and in Hades! … You invented a form, and the greatest poets have adapted themselves to that form.”
I always find him amusing in his enthusiasms, but I think he is here mistaken. The best sonnets are those where the Sonnet has been adapted by the poets -- noncely or not.
Best,
Marcia