Chant Royal

1 min read

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noun

Definition

An elaborate French poetic form with five stanzas of eleven lines each, plus a five-line envoi, all with the same five rhymes.

Example

The chant royal is one of the most challenging traditional French forms.

Notes

Medieval French fixed form: typically five 11-line stanzas with a repeated refrain and a 5-line envoi; demanding rhyme scheme.

How to spot Chant Royal

When you read a poem, look for patterns that match Chant Royal. Note where it appears (line breaks, stanza positions), how often it repeats, and what emotion or emphasis it creates. Try underlining each instance, then ask: what changes if it’s removed?

Common mistakes

A common mistake is confusing Chant Royal with nearby concepts listed in ‘See also.’ Always check its defining feature: the formal rule or effect that makes it Chant Royal, not just a similar device.

Using Chant Royal in analysis

In essays, define Chant Royal briefly, cite a short quotation, and explain the *specific* effect on tone, pacing, or imagery. Tie the effect to the poem’s theme rather than describing the device in isolation.

1-minute quiz

Which line uses Chant Royal most clearly?

  1. A line that deliberately demonstrates the device’s key feature.
  2. A line that is superficially similar but lacks the defining feature.
  3. A line unrelated to the device.
  4. A paraphrase of the poem’s theme.

Tip: pick the line that shows the device’s defining feature.

Related Definitions

Study Tips

  • Identify this device in poems you read
  • Practice using it in your own writing
  • Compare with related terms
  • Discuss examples with classmates

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