three
Conventional blues typically have three lines per stanza. The first two lines often repeat and rhyme, while the third line provides a resolution or twist to the narrative. This structure is commonly known as the AAB form in Blues Music.
"Funeral Blues" is a poem with four stanzas and four lines in each stanza. The lines have an even rhythm, with four beats per line. The poem has a couplet rhyme, which means that the first two lines, and the last two lines of each stanza rhyme. At the start of the poem there are a number of clear images to show grief. The poem has a tone of unbearable grief throughout. The short orders in the opening stanza create a feeling of urgency in the poet's voice. Images of time from the first stanza are echoed in the third stanza. There are many sound repetitions in the poem.
A stanza of four lines is called a quatrain.
A stanza is a group of lines in a poem that are separated by spaces. The number of lines in a stanza can vary, and it doesn't have to be specifically three lines.
No every stanza has its own amount of lines
a stanza with 5 lines is called a sestet
A stanza with two lines is called a couplet.
A quatrain is a stanza with four lines.
A quatrain is, in poetry, a specific type of poem. There are not many rules to follow, and writing a quatrain is fairly simple. The quatrain contains just four lines. That's it and that's all the rules for writing a quatrain.
A stanza containging two lines
Yes, a poem can have two lines in each stanza
The poem "Out in the Field with God" contains four stanzas. Each stanza varies in the number of lines, with the first stanza having six lines, the second and third stanzas having four lines each, and the final stanza having five lines.