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- Balliol_rhyme abstract "A Balliol rhyme is a doggerel verse form with a distinctive meter. They are quatrains consisting of two pairs of rhyming couplets, each line having four beats. The first couplet contains the name of a particular individual, and the second couplet usually elaborates on that person's character or exploits or weakness. The form is associated with Balliol College, Oxford. It originated with "The Masque of B-ll--l", published anonymously by a group of Balliol undergraduates in 1875. The verses were inspired by the conventions of traditional mummers plays (at their peak of popularity in the late 19th century), in which the dialogue took the form of simple verses, and in which characters introduced themselves on first entrance with some such formula as: "Here comes I a Turkish Knight / Come from the Turkish land to fight".Balliol rhymes are almost always about a person. They are not to be confused with Clerihews.".
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageExternalLink purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS119231262&dyn=4!nxt_1_0_CS119231262?sw_aep=ucl_ttda.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageExternalLink masque-b-ll-l.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageID "24494570".
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageLength "2748".
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageOutDegree "13".
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageRevisionID "591160388".
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Athenaeum_Club,_London.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Balliol_College,_Oxford.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Jowett.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Blenheim_Palace.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Category:Balliol_College,_Oxford.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Category:Poetic_form.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Category:Rhyme.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Clerihew.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Doggerel.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink George_Curzon,_1st_Marquess_Curzon_of_Kedleston.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink John_Wilson_Croker.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Mummers_Play.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Mummers_play.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Poetry.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLink Verse_form.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageWikiLinkText "Balliol rhyme".
- Balliol_rhyme hasPhotoCollection Balliol_rhyme.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_news.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Balliol_rhyme wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Subscription.
- Balliol_rhyme subject Category:Balliol_College,_Oxford.
- Balliol_rhyme subject Category:Poetic_form.
- Balliol_rhyme subject Category:Rhyme.
- Balliol_rhyme hypernym Form.
- Balliol_rhyme type University.
- Balliol_rhyme type Term.
- Balliol_rhyme type University.
- Balliol_rhyme comment "A Balliol rhyme is a doggerel verse form with a distinctive meter. They are quatrains consisting of two pairs of rhyming couplets, each line having four beats. The first couplet contains the name of a particular individual, and the second couplet usually elaborates on that person's character or exploits or weakness. The form is associated with Balliol College, Oxford. It originated with "The Masque of B-ll--l", published anonymously by a group of Balliol undergraduates in 1875.".
- Balliol_rhyme label "Balliol rhyme".
- Balliol_rhyme sameAs m.080p153.
- Balliol_rhyme sameAs Q4851774.
- Balliol_rhyme sameAs Q4851774.
- Balliol_rhyme wasDerivedFrom Balliol_rhyme?oldid=591160388.
- Balliol_rhyme isPrimaryTopicOf Balliol_rhyme.