"The Light-Keeper"
That depends on the poem. Some do, and some don't. It isn't required in a free verse poem, if that is what you are asking.
Free verse has variable rhythm.
Free form and free verse.
Education, Business and Free Verse
Cinquains , Tanka and free verse.
Some examples of songs that feature a repeated verse and refrain structure include "Hey Jude" by The Beatles, "Don't Stop Believin'" by Journey, and "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen.
Free-Verse can be synonymous with stream of consciousness. The beat generation were not the first, but were pioneers in this genre. Look at works such as "On The Road" by Kerouac or "Naked Lunch" by Ginsberg. Gertrude Stein is also an earlier eXample of free verse.
These are examples of different types of poetry forms. Haiku follows a specific syllable pattern, free verse has no set structure, and five senses poetry focuses on using sensory details. Each form offers a unique way to express emotions and ideas through language.
as long as you want it to be, it's FREE verse
Haiku, sonnet, free form/free verse, epic, couplet, narrative...
a lyric
There isn't a requirement of rhythm for a free verse poem.