What are the different types of internal rhyme?
There are three types of internal rhyme:
- Rhyme within the same line: Words rhyme within a single line, as in Poe’s “Annabel Lee”: “For the moon never beams without bringing me dreams/Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;”
- Rhyme in the middle of consecutive lines: Rhymes appear in the middle of two separate lines, like in Shel Silverstein’s “Snowball”: “I thought I’d keep it as a pet, / And let it sleep with me.”
- Rhyme at the end and middle: A word at the end of the line rhymes with a word in the middle of the next line. For example, “The snowflakes are dancing, floating, and falling. / The church bells are calling, but I will not go.”
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