masculine rhyme การใช้
- The rhyme scheme is ABCBDB, with masculine rhymes throughout.
- In English-language poetry, especially serious verse, masculine rhymes comprise a majority of all rhymes.
- John Donne's poem " Lecture Upon the Shadow " is one of many that utilise exclusively masculine rhyme:
- Nonce words ending in "-ed " ('provided with') may produce other potentially refractory masculine rhymes.
- Classical alexandrines are always rhymed, often in couplets alternating masculine rhymes and feminine rhymes, though other configurations ( such as quatrains and sonnets ) are also common.
- Almost the entire work is made up of 389 stanzas of iambic tetrameter with the unusual rhyme scheme " AbAbCCddEffEgg ", where the uppercase letters represent feminine rhymes while the lowercase letters represent masculine rhymes.
- Another form developed by Konopnicka is the five-line strophe including decasyllabic lines and masculine rhymes : 10m / 5f / 10m / 10m / 5f, used in " Kt髍zy idziemy " ( " We that are going " ).
- The unusually heavy stresses and abrupt masculine rhymes impose a slow and sonorous weightiness upon the movement of the iambic octosyllabics which is quite in contrast, say, to the light fast metre of the final stanza where speed of movement matches buoyancy of tone ."
- The simple old poet, with his adoration of Greek ( when a thing pleased him greatly he was wont to talk of it as " Greek Verse " ), his delight in journeys and sight-seeing, his dislike for literary talk save with intimates and equals, his vanities and vengeances, his pride in the memory of favours bestowed on him by popes and princes, his " infinita maraviglia " over Virgil's versification and metaphor, his fondness for masculine rhymes and blank verse, his quiet Christianity, is a figure deserving perhaps of more study than is likely to be bestowed on that " new world " of art which it was his glory to fancy his own, by discovery and by conquest.