The rule of leveling in poetry

For the five-character rhyme, there are the following sentences:

(1) Level and level

fair and reasonable

The characteristics of these two sentence patterns are consistent from beginning to end, which is also called flat and even. If we want to make some changes and change it to a different level, we can move the last word to the front and it will become:

Fairness and justice.

(d) it's just plain.

No matter how you change the five-character rhyme, you can't find these four basic sentence patterns.

Seven-character poem just adds a rhythm unit in front of five-character poem, and its basic sentence pattern is:

(a) Even if it is flat, even if it is flat

(b) Flat and level.

(c) general.

(4) Flat and flat.

No matter how the seven-character rhyme changes, you can't recognize these four basic sentence patterns.

Remember the above eight basic sentence patterns, and your metrical poem will begin!

Is everyone paying attention? Even basic sentence patterns can be deduced step by step. As long as you remember the basic two sentences "flat, stable, flat, stable", everything else can be deduced. If you master the rules, you don't have to recite them.

There is also a rule in these sentence patterns, that is, each pair will be reversed: the level of the fourth word is opposite to that of the second word, and the level of the sixth word is opposite to that of the fourth word, thus forming a sense of rhythm. Look at the second, fourth and sixth words of each sentence, and you will know a concept, that is, "flat and flat" and "flat and flat", and there are only these two. However, every word can be reversed, because the stress falls on even syllables and the singular syllables are relatively unimportant.