Rhyme scheme Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
A rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhyming lines in a poem. It is usually referred to by using letters to indicate which lines rhyme.For example "abab" indicates a four-line stanza in which the first and third lines rhyme, as do the second and fourth. Here is an example of this rhyme scheme from To Anthea, Who May Command Him Any Thing by Robert Herrick:
- Bid me to weep, and I will weep,
- While I have eyes to see;
- And having none, yet I will keep
- A heart to weep for thee.
In English, highly repetitive rhyme schemes are unusual. English has more vowel sounds than Italian, for example, meaning that such a scheme would be far more restrictive for an English writer than an Italian one - there are fewer suitable words to match a given pattern. Even such schemes as the terza rima ("aba bcb cdc ded..."), used by Dante Alighieri in The Divine Comedy, have been considered too difficult for English.
Some rhyme schemes:
- Chant royal: Five stanzas of "ababccddedE" followed by either "ddedE" or "ccddedE". (The capital letters indicate a line repeated verbatim.)
- Cinquain: "ababb".
- Clerihew: "aabb aabb".
- Couplet: "aa", but usually occurs as "aa bb cc dd ...".
- Limerick: "aabba".
- Ottava rima: "abababcc".
- Rhyme royal: "ababbcc".
- Rondelet: "AbAabbA".
- Rubaiyat: "aaba".
- Sonnet
- Petrarchan sonnet: "abba abba cde cde" or "abba abba cdc cdc".
- Shakespearean sonnet: "abab cdcd efef gg".
- Spenserian sonnet: "abab bcbc cdcd ee".
- Spenserian stanza: "ababbcbcc".
- Terza rima: "aba bcb cdc ...", ending on "yzy z" or "yzy zz".
- Triplet: "aaa", often repeating like the couplet.
- Villanelle: five stanzas of "aba" and then "abaa", but some lines are required to be repeats.
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