Tautological rime - statement in the rhyme of the same word. Because the repetition of a word at the end of a verse is an epiphoda, the tautological rime is also called an epiphytic rhyme. Your death, Jesus, the coming life. Death, taking for us, the power of death You take, and from Your love, the love of this death You give power to us, which allows us to live. Death, you are going through dignity, For a man can escape eternal death. There is nothing over you, a saint grateful for death, The more expensive this treasure of changeable life. Therefore I have abhorred life; desiring death, For death can only lead to life, Such great weight in my sense of this death. So I am living dead; konam, yes life I come and so I crave this death, That in her is the bliss of my life. (Sebastian Grabowiecki, Your death, Jesus, the coming life)

The tautological rhymes are in the poem by the Czech poet Josef Hora: I opened the window into the darkness of the liquid, the stars screamed at me with my singing. You remember the darkness with singing singing on that night black, dense, liquid? I opened the window into the darkness of silver, around me as a shawl wrapped the noise of the weir. You remember the heavy smell of it on the soft bottom of the night that silver? I opened the window into the darkness, talking with a slave, a jee, with rings on the moon, with dying steps on the road. I opened the window, the steps went in silence, the steps of our ancient, sweet, shy sins the liquid darkness and the silver silence. (Josef Hora, Window)

The tautological rime is something different from the homonymic rhyme, in which different words with the same wording (homonyms) are compiled.

wiki

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pupo Román

Myrmex Indikos

Names of streets and squares