A poem is generally written according to a rhyme scheme. A rhyme scheme is the pattern in which the poet uses rhyming words.
If your looking for the name of a specific rhyme scheme in which every other line rhymes, look up the scheme called a Spenserian Sonnet. When marked, a Spenserian Sonner has a "abab bcbc cdcd ee" rhyme scheme. Shakespearean Sonnets have a similar pattern of "abab cdcd efef gg".
it is generally called A, B, A, B
That is a limerick.
Did you mean quatrain?If so, it is four line stanza or verse. It can either be a part of the poem or the entire poem. Rhyming is usually every other line, but it can follow other patterns or have no rhyme at all.
a cautionary poem is a poem that has a moral. like... don't steal. or don't lie. it warns you not to do something. it also has rhyming couplets. that's line 1 rhymes with line 2, 3 & 4, 5 & 6, and so on
synergy
I believe you mean, "Do the first letters of every line in a poem have to be capitalized?" I am also assuming you are then quoting the poem. The answer is that it depends upon the poem. If the beginning of every line in a poem is capitalized, then, yes, when you quote it you must capitalize it. If, however, the original text does not capitalize the first letter in a line then you don't. The thing you must remember to do, when quoting from a poem within your own writing, is to mark the end of each line with a /, so that it is clear where each line begins and ends. If you are quoting more than about four lines, then you probably need to indent it and replicate the poem's original layout. If you are asking because you are writing your own poetry - then you may do whatever you believe works best for your poem.
; Villanelle : A 19-line poem consisting of five tercets and a final quatrain on two rhymes. The first and third lines of the first tercet repeat alternately as a refrain closing the succeeding stanzas and joined as the final couplet of the quatrain.
The fourth line of a standard five-line limerick rhymes with the third line.
A CDDC rhyme scheme poem is a type of poem where the last word of the first line rhymes with the last word of the second line, and the last word of the third line rhymes with the last word of the fourth line. The pattern is repeated throughout the poem.
The poet, Phillis Wheatley, uses an AABB rhyme scheme in her poem "To His Excellency General Washington." This means that the last word of every other line rhymes with each other throughout the poem. This rhyme scheme gives the poem a sense of rhythm and unity.
external rhyme
Did you mean quatrain?If so, it is four line stanza or verse. It can either be a part of the poem or the entire poem. Rhyming is usually every other line, but it can follow other patterns or have no rhyme at all.
A narrative poem's rhyme scheme is aabb or abab.
A poem that rhymes throughout is typically called a rhymed poem or a rhyming poem.
The rhyme scheme of a poem refers to the pattern in which the lines rhyme with each other. It is usually denoted using letters to represent the different rhyme sounds. For example, a rhyme scheme of ABAB means that every other line rhymes with each other.
Cream scream team beam deem ream neem
STANZARhymes within lines are simply called internal rhymes. Internal rhymes generally enrich the sonorities of the poem, and may emphasise comparison or contrast between the rhyming words of the internal rhyme. Internal rhyme might also be present to maintain the versification or structure of the poem; the line does not break after the internal rhyme because the whole line maintains the structure of the poem, or a certain number of syllables are needed in the whole line. Internal rhymes are generally considered to relax the rigidity of verse with strict metre and rhyme between lines.
When the first letter of every line is a capital then it is traditional.
This rhyme scheme is referred to as "alternate rhyme," where lines rhyme with every second line in a stanza. In "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," this pattern helps create a sense of balance and symmetry, mirroring the harmonious relationship portrayed in the poem.