Roses are red
Violets are blue
Peaches are sweet
And you are too
Also
A small bird chirped outside
My window all day long.
I wondered if it knew
How much I loved its song.
The rhyme scheme of these lines is: abab abba abcb abac.
"The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe has a varied rhyme scheme and meter throughout the poem. The rhyme scheme changes from stanza to stanza, ranging from ABAC to ABCB. The meter also varies, with some lines in trochaic meter and others in iambic meter.
Rhyme Scheme
the rhyme scheme is AABBCCDDEEFFGGHHIIJJKKLL
a poet can use any kind of a rhyming scheme in a poem. I've been writing some poems myself too so i know about it... there are schemes like ababcdcd, abac, abcb, ect. so there's no particular answer for that...
The rhyme scheme is ababcc.
There is no specific rhyme scheme for a calligram
A rhyme scheme can be anything you like.
The rhyme scheme of "Mother to Son" by Langston Hughes is irregular and does not follow a specific pattern throughout the poem.
The name for the rhyme scheme AABB is known as a "couplet rhyme scheme." This means that every two lines rhyme with each other.
Rhyme is a noun and so is scheme.
The rhyme scheme for "Clorinda and Damon" is AABBCCDD.