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Robert Louis StevensonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Requiem” is a tight construct, two carefully measured quatrains, that is two stanzas of four lines with the rhyme scheme AAAB and CCCB respectively. What that means is that the fourth and eighth lines of the poem, the closing lines of each stanza, rhyme.
That quatrain form gifts the poem with the feel of a children’s poem, almost like a nursery rhyme. That form helps Stevenson with his thematic argument that death is not something to fear. The easy beat and the compelling rhyme scheme eases, even mocks the inclination to see a poem about death and burial as forbidding, even disturbing. Death and burials are traditionally the stuff of blank verse, stately and august, not quatrains. The easy beat of quatrains is for kids and for telling stories. As demonstrated by the number of musical settings this poem has inspired, the form creates accessibility and invites rather than intimidates an audience.
The curious pattern of the end rhyme scheme, that is the look back, a rhyming echo, from the close of the second quatrain back to the closing line of the first quatrain helps underscore not only the poet’s understanding of death but his resistance to wanting to die.
By Robert Louis Stevenson
At the Sea-Side
At the Sea-Side
Robert Louis Stevenson
Kidnapped
Kidnapped
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Markheim
Markheim
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The Black Arrow
The Black Arrow
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The Bottle Imp
The Bottle Imp
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The Land of Counterpane
The Land of Counterpane
Robert Louis Stevenson
The Master of Ballantrae
The Master of Ballantrae
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The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson
Treasure Island
Treasure Island
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