ABABCB !
The blacksmith is a role model for the community in the way that he balances his family and work life.
Rhyming couplets
The poem consists of a single stanza and has alternately rhyming lines, it focused on the father perspective of an accident involving his son.
three-line stanza
there are a couple modern words which could be defined as a rhyming song, such as rap or jingle, but the only musical term in English that I can find is Stanza, which applies to song as it does to poetryStanza - A selection of a song, two or more lines long, characterized by a common meter, rhyme, and number of lines.there is a more obscure term, Virelay which I think only applies to a very specific french song:(n.) An ancient French song, or short poem, wholly in two rhymes, and composed in short lines, with a refrain.(This definition is from the 1913 Webster's Dictionary and may be outdated.)
ABABCB
The blacksmith is a role model for the community in the way that he balances his family and work life.
sestet
The last stanza of "The Village Blacksmith" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow follows an AABB rhyme scheme. This means that the last words of the second and fourth lines rhyme with each other, while the last words of the first and third lines also rhyme with each other.
stanza??
The rhyming pattern is ABAB.
Rhyming couplets
A rhyme pattern, or rhyme scheme, is the pattern of ending rhyming sounds between lines of a poem or song. For example, "A,B,A,B," indicates a four-line stanza in which the first and third lines rhyme, as do the second and the fourth.
The poem "Vocation" by Rabindranath Tagore follows a rhyming scheme of AABBCCDD in each stanza. The stanza pattern consists of four lines in each stanza, making it a quatrain. This structured form helps to create a sense of rhythm and cohesion throughout the poem, emphasizing the theme of finding one's true calling in life.
The rhyme scheme in the second stanza of a poem refers to the pattern of rhyming words at the end of each line. It is typically denoted with letters, such as AABB or ABAB, to show which lines rhyme with each other.
A stanza is like a paragraph in a poem. If you are reading a poem with a rhyme scheme, the stanzas help the rhymes. So basically in each stanza the rhyme scheme changes.... for example in the first stanza you are rhyming things with the word 'cake', and in the second stanza you are rhyming things with the word 'cat'.
The poem "In Flanders Fields" by John McCrae follows an ABAB rhyme scheme in the first stanza, then switches to AABB in the second and third stanzas. The rhyming pattern helps create a rhythmic flow that adds to the poem's poignancy.