“Refrain and return—fixed music in a circle of lines.”
| Title | Author | Type of Poem |
|---|---|---|
| Flower-pieces I. Love Lies Bleeding | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Rondeau |
| Flower-pieces II. Love in a Mist | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Rondeau |
| Forerunners | Madison Julius Cawein | Rondeau |
| Go Plant A Tree | Ella Wheeler Wilcox | Rondeau |
| Had I Wist | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Rondeau |
| Heartsease Country | Algernon Charles Swinburne | Rondeau |
| Hendecasyllabics | Alfred Lord Tennyson | Rondeau |
| Her Little Feet | William Ernest Henley | Rondeau |
| Her Prayer | Madison Julius Cawein | Rondeau |
| Here They Trysted, Here They Strayed | William Ernest Henley | Rondeau |
A rondeau is a fixed French form built on two rhymes and a repeating refrain (the rentrement). Its musical return gives the poem a memorable circularity.
Core characteristics of the rondeau:
a and b) and a refrain R made from the opening phrase.
A common scheme is aabba aabR aabbaR, where R is the short repeated refrain.
In a strong rondeau, the refrain doesn’t just repeat—it evolves; each reappearance casts prior lines in a fresh light.