No it's abab
A ballad typically consists of four-line stanzas called quatrains. These quatrains often follow an ABAB rhyme scheme and help to establish the narrative structure of the ballad.
A ballad poem typically consists of four-line stanzas with a rhyme scheme of either ABAB or ABCB. The length can vary, but a traditional ballad can have multiple stanzas, each telling a story or narrative.
An example of a ballad with an AB-CD rhyme scheme is "Tam Lin," a traditional Scottish ballad. Each stanza in this ballad follows the AB-CD rhyme scheme where the second and fourth lines rhyme with each other.
A ballad stanza consists of four lines per stanza, also known as a quatrain. These stanzas traditionally follow a rhyme scheme of ABCB or ABAB.
The rhyme scheme for the ballad "Ballad of the Cool Fountain" is typically AABB or ABAB, with alternating rhyming lines throughout the poem.
Yes, a ballad can have an aabb rhyme scheme throughout the whole poem. The aabb rhyme scheme consists of rhyming couplets, where two lines rhyme with each other. This pattern can be maintained throughout the entire ballad.
A ballad typically consists of three or four-line stanzas with alternating rhyme schemes. The number of stanzas in a ballad can vary, but they often tell a story or convey a message through narrative poetry.
It consists of eight stanzas and has no formal rhyme scheme.
The rhyme scheme of "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" by Robert Browning is mainly AABBCC for the stanzas.
In the first, second, fourth, and seventh stanzas the rhyme scheme is a, b, a, b. In the third, fifth, and sixth stanzas, the rhyme scheme is a, b, c, b; however, there is an internal rhyme into the third line: "he" and "tree" "dead" and "head" "day" and "Calay!"
The poem "Meg Merrilies" by John Keats uses a regular ABAB rhyme scheme throughout its stanzas. Each stanza consists of four lines with rhyme scheme ABAB.
The poem "Coromandel Fishers" by Sarojini Naidu has a rhyme scheme of ABAB for the first three stanzas and AABB for the last stanza.