Blank verse is considered traditional because it has been used in English literature since the 16th century. It follows a specific pattern of iambic pentameter, which gives it a formal and structured quality that has been associated with classic poetry. Additionally, many famous poets, such as Shakespeare and Milton, have used blank verse in their works, further solidifying its place in the traditional literary canon.
Blank verse does not have rhymes.
Edwin Muir wrote in blank verse.Blank verse is often confused with free verse. Free verse avoids traditional poetic forms such as rhyme schemes and conventional metres and can follow any pattern the poet wishes which means that the verses and lines can differ in length as the poet chooses. However blank verse like free verse is also unrhymed but each line in blank verse has roughly the same number of stresses and syllables, usually following the iambic pentameter
An example of a blank verse is, The Ball Poem by John Berryman What is the boy now, who has lost his ball, What, what is he to do? I saw it go Merrily bouncing, down the street, and then Merrily over-there it is in the water!
Blank verse is poetry written in un rhymed iambic pentameter.
Blank Verse is essentially poetry without an audible rhyme, it does have cadence or a fixed meter. The psalms are sometimes so-considered. Some people have even considered the preamble to the Constitution ( in many ways better suited to classroom and assembly activities than the Bellamy Flag pledge)- to be a form of Blank verse.
Rhyme does not appear in blank verse. Blank verse is a form of poetry that does not have a rhyme scheme, but has a consistent meter, often iambic pentameter.
In Julius Caesar, Antony speaks in blank verse.
Shakespeare's blank verse was composed in blank verse, which is to say unrhymed iambic pentameter. Unless you want to know where he did his writing to which question nobody knows the answer.
Unrhymed verse.
The correct answer is sticks to certain traditional patterns
Free verse has variable rhythm.
A verse with no rhyme but with meter is called blank verse. Blank verse is a form of poetry characterized by a consistent meter, most commonly iambic pentameter, but lacking a rhyme scheme. It is often used in dramatic works and epic poetry.