Any poem u want to make!
The type of poetry described is a terza rima, featuring three-line stanzas with the rhyme scheme ABA BCB CDC, and so on.
terza rima
It consists of eight stanzas and has no formal rhyme scheme.
The ballad is a form of poetry that often features a rhyme scheme of abab or abcb in quatrains with alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and trimeter. While some ballads may have stanzas with three lines and a different rhyme scheme, the traditional structure often leans towards the quatrains.
a form of poetry that has three-line stanzas with the rhyme scheme aba, bcb
The general name for such writings is 'poetry'.
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.
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.
The rhyme scheme for each stanza in the poem "Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead" by Alfred Lord Tennyson is ABAB. This pattern continues throughout the four stanzas in the poem.