it is a quatrain four lines of end rhyme or abab.
As reference, see the question: What is an Aa bb cc poem
Aabbccdd eeffgghh
g
The poem "Trees" has the rhyme scheme AA BB CC.
The rhyme scheme in "The Wife of Bath's Tale" by Geoffrey Chaucer is mostly in rhyming couplets, which means that each pair of lines rhyme with each other (AA, BB, CC, etc.). Chaucer used this rhyme scheme throughout much of "The Canterbury Tales" to maintain a sense of unity and structure in his storytelling.
Assigned rhyme scheme poetry is a type of poetry where a specific pattern of rhyming words is predetermined. This means that certain lines within the poem must end with words that rhyme according to a set structure, such as AABB or ABAB. Common examples of assigned rhyme scheme poetry include sonnets and limericks.
Marvell uses rhyming couplets: AA,BB,CC,DD,EE,FF... my dad just bought a car. it can go really far.
Aa
A: I'm just kidding, don't get mad, A: Beacause that would make me very sad B: Your my friend, best one ever, B: and we'll always be together C: I won't make you eat my poo, C: it's probably not good for you -Quote from one of my stories I am writing- A and A rhyme, B and B rhyme, C and C rhyme. but not with the same word
You look at the ends of the lines and see if the first line rhymes with the second (AA) and the third rhymes with the fourth (BB), or whether the first and third rhyme and the second and fourth (ABAB), or if it is a limerick (AABBA) and so on and so forth.
Recorder: For One And AllAA BB AA GG AA BB A B A AA BB AA GG AA BB A B A BB BB AA G G BB B A A G A BB BB AA G G BB B A A G A AA BB AA GG AA BB A B A AA BB AA GG AA BB A B A
The rhyme scheme for a poem is usually denoted by assigning a different letter of the alphabet to each new rhyme. If "A red hat" were a couplet, the rhyme scheme would be AA.