0 a regular pattern of rhyme at the end of the lines in a poem
1 a regular pattern of rhyme at the end of the lines in a poem
An anonymous reviewer for this journal has suggested that this is an instance of the poet constrained by the demands of the rhyme scheme.
These phrases, like the rhyme scheme, are repeated five times.
The sentence of the sestet begins at line 7, before the expected pause, and the rhyme scheme supports the sense of disorientation.
In contrast to the more organised rhyme scheme in the sestets of the opening section, lines 13-34 rhyme by pairs of even-numbered lines.
On the one hand, this text conforms to traditional sonnet principles with its fourteen lines divided 4+4+3+3 and its regular metre and unambiguous rhyme scheme.
The rhyme scheme may be diagrammed: ababababcccb.
The ballade as a verse form typically consists of three eight-line stanzas, each with a consistent metre and a particular rhyme scheme.
This poem has a common rhyme scheme, abb cddc cbb.