Seguidilla (poetry)

The seguidilla is a verse form of Spanish in origin.[1] It has seven syllable-counted lines (7,5,7,5,5,7,5), and rhymes the second and fourth, and the fifth and seventh lines (x,A,x,A,B,x,B).

Example

So quiet now, the ripples
lapping on the shore
scarcely disturb the silence
- a whisper, no more.
But who knows the power
the growing breakers may have
in another hour?
- Paul Hansford
gollark: `t=lambda x:x;print("BEES"*t(9))`
gollark: Funnily enough, the 32 byte limit is *barely* long enough that I can define and use... the identity function.
gollark: `9**9**9**9**9**9*9` is greater than 2^64, probably, so I cannot be stopped with C/Rust.
gollark: Unless we are just ignoring such limits.
gollark: This is still constrained by C integer sizes.

References

  1. Stephen Cushman; Clare Cavanagh; Jahan Ramazani; Paul Rouzer (26 August 2012). The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics: Fourth Edition. Princeton University Press. pp. 1282–. ISBN 1-4008-4142-9.


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