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2 An Example 3 External link |
The name kyrielle derives from the kyrie eleison (Lord have mercy), which is part of the Roman Catholic liturgy. A kyrielle is written in rhyming coupletss or quatrains and uses the phrase Lord have mercy, or a variant on it, as a refrain as the second line of the couplet or last line of the quatrain. In less strict usage, other phrases, and sometimes single words, are used as the refrain.
If the kyrielle is written in couplets, the rhyme scheme will be: a-A, a-A. There are a number of possible rhyme schemes for kyrielle constructed in quatrains, including a-a-b-B, c-c-b-B and a-b-a-B, c-b-c-B (uppercase letters signify the refrain). In the original French kyrielle, lines were generally octosyllabic. In English, the lines are generally iambic tetrameters.
This kyrielle is by Thomas Campion
A Lenten Hymn
Name and Form
An Example
External link