Stroppe parity
Pivostar strofa - stanza consisting of an even number of lines. The group of stropper stropes includes dysthas, all varieties of tetrastych, sekstyna, octostych, octave, decyma and oniegin strop. In Polish literature, parity stropes are more common than non-flagost strofts, with the four-bar strop being the most commonly used. An example of a parity strop is the mentioned octave, used, among others, by Luís de Camões in Luzjady.
The weapons and barons, That of the western beach Lusitana, For seas never before sailed, They passed beyond Taprobana, In dangers and striving wars, More than promised by human strength, And among remote people they built New Kingdom, which both sublimated; (Luís Vaz de Camões, Os Lusíadas)
Octave is one of the most frequently used stanzas, while the six-verse rhyming abccba, used by Robert Browning in the poem Night Meeting is very rare.
Gray sea, long, dark land; A huge yellow crescent horn; A sudden, hissing, unconscious tan The curly sleepers wake up from sleep The volatile me canoe swings the bow, In wet sand, its current has already disappeared. (translated by Jan Kasprowicz)
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