A villanelle is a nineteen line poetic form consisting of five tercets followed by a quatrain. Some examples of a villanelle poem are One Art by Elizabeth Bishop, Mad Girl's Love Song by Sylvia Plath, and The Home on the Hill by Edward Arlington Robinson.
The definition of villanelle is:
a short poem of fixed form, written in tercets, usually five in number, followed by a final quatrain, all being based on two rhymes.
It's a villanelle!
Correct Answer= "a formal poem using extensive repetition"
Something about 2 lines and a complex rhyme scheme, sorry I’m high and had to make an acc to comment and I forgot bc it wouldn’t let me make a username
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a 16th century poem with the title Villanelle
There is no place like Villanelle, neither in Spain, nor anywhere else. Villanelle is a poetic form that consists of 19 lines. It derives from the Italian word villanelle, and means rustic song or dance.
I just looked up the definition of "Villanelle" in the Wikipedia; I suggest you do the same (or in some other reference site). There is nothing in the definition I read that suggest that this kind of poem has to be evil.
a poem with "Villanelle" as its title
It's a villanelle!
Villanelle :) -Apex-
Villanelle poetry is a form that originated in France in the 16th century. It gained popularity in English literature in the 19th and 20th centuries. The most famous example of a villanelle is probably "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night" by Dylan Thomas.
A villanelle poem typically consists of 19 lines, with a specific rhyming pattern and repeating lines. It is structured with five tercets followed by a quatrain.
Correct Answer= "a formal poem using extensive repetition"
From a 16th-century poem about a turtledove
It is a villanelle.
A 16th-century poem with the title "Villanelle"