227k views
5 votes
Over the river and through the woods rhyme scheme by lydia maria child

User Ary
by
6.3k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

The rhyme scheme in "Over the river and through the woods" is:

ABCB ABDB ACEC ACFC AGBG AHIH

Step-by-step explanation:

To determine the rhyme scheme of a poem, we must attribute a letter to each different final sound that appears in the last word of each line. We should always attribute the letter A to the first final sound. Every different sound that follows then should be attributed the next letter of the alphabet. Thus:

Over the river and through the woods, A

To grandfather's* house we go; B

The horse knows the way to carry the sleigh, C

Thru the white and drifted snow, oh! B

Over the river and thru the woods, A

Oh, how the wind does blow! B

It stings the toes and bites the nose, D

As over the ground we go. B

Over the river and thru the wood, A

To have a first-rate play; C

Oh, hear the bell ring, "Ting-a-ling-ling!" E

Hurrah for Thanksgiving Day-ay! C

Over the river and thru the woods, A

Trot fast my dapple gray! C

Spring over the ground like a hunting hound, F

For this is Thanksgiving Day! C

Over the river and through the woods, A

And straight through the barnyard gate. G

We seem to go extremely slow, B

It is so hard to wait! G

Over the river and through the woods, A

Now Grandmother's cap I spy! H

Hurrah for fun! Is the pudding done? I

Hurrah for the pumpkin pie! H

Note: If we take a good look at the third stanza, we will notice the the final word of the first line is "wood" and not "woods", which actually makes it different from the first lines in the other stanzas. If we were to consider it different, then it should be labeled E, not A. It may have been intentional, it may have been an accident. I decided to label it an A, since the first lines are supposed to be the same. If we change it for an E, then we must change E to F, F to G, and so on.

User Darien Fawkes
by
6.1k points