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Hi everyone! I am excited to share with you a popular lyrical verse during the Middle Ages, Ballata (Italian). It was originally set to music meant for joyful dancing. It has limited rhyme and includes a refrain.
The ballata (plural: ballate) is an Italian poetic and musical form in use from the late 13th to the 15th century. It has the musical form AbbaA, with the first and last stanzas having the same texts. It is thus most similar to the French musical ‘forme fixe’ virelai (and not the ballade as the name might otherwise suggest). The first and last “A” is called a ripresa, the “b” lines are piedi (feet), while the fourth line is called a “volta”. Longer ballate may be found in the form AbbaAbbaA, etc. Unlike the virelai, the two “b” lines usually have exactly the same music and only in later ballate pick up the (formerly distinctly French) first and second (open and close) endings. The term comes from the verb ballare, to dance, and the form certainly began as dance music.
The elements are :
*stanzaic, written most often in 3 quatrains which includes a refrain (A) at the end of each stanza. Occasionally you may find more than 3 stanzas in the poem. The refrain (A) is also added at the beginning of the 1st quatrain, making the 1st stanza a quintain (5 lines).
*categorized as having no set meter. However during the period from which these verse forms emerged, quantitative or syllabic meters were most often present in the verse of these regions. The dominant Occitan meter was hexasyllabic (6 syllable) lines and the dominant Italian meter was the heptasyllabic (7 syllable) lines with the primary accent on the 6th syllable.
*rhymed, rhyme scheme AbbaA bbaA bbaA
First Stanza – 5 lines
Second Stanza – 4 lines
Third Stanza – 4 lines
(etc)
Gentle Rain
by Grace Guevara
you are the gentle rain (A)
on burning summer sky (b)
slow patter on my eyes (b)
lingering kiss that remains (a)
you are the gentle rain (A)
sketching greens as birds fly (b)
scatter-skitter noise, your sighs (b)
are calming clouds & quiet plains (a)
you are the gentle rain (A)
humming blues with bow tie (b)
my hands are stirring chai (b)
winding down, hushed vane (a)
you are the gentle rain (A)
Writing challenge: Write a poem using the ballata rhyme pattern as explained above. You can write 3 or more stanzas for your poem but note that the end rhyme scheme is limited to two, A and b.
New to dVerse? Here’s how to join in:
*Write a ballata poem in response to the writing challenge.
*Enter a link directly to your poem and your name by clicking Mr. Linky below
and remember to check the little box to accept the use/privacy policy.
*You will find links to other poets and more will join so please do check
back later in order to read their poems.
*Read and comment on other poets’ work–we all come here to have our poems read.
*Please link back to dVerse from your site/blog.

Good evening poets, and thank you Grace for introducing me to a new form. It was hard to know what to write about, until I came across a picture of a scarlet pimpernel, which reminded me of the ones I love when I was a little girl.
Hi Kim, Thank you for joining in the prompt. Such an intetesting picture that you have selected that I look forward to reading.
Hi everyone. Hope you have fun with this form. We have tiramisu and canneloni and blueberry pie on the menu today with coffee or tea. I am out in the city but I will respond and visit you once I am home.
Hi Grace and everyone! Thanks for this challenging prompt! I’ll see what I come up with. I will have some tiramisu if I may, please. And a coffee.☕️
Hi Melissa. Looking foward to it. Tiramisu and coffee for you!!!!
Hello Grace and All. I appreciate learning about this new form. It was enjoyable to write to, and once I compile two word lists of possible rhyming words for it, it fell together nicely. Could I please have a slice of tiramisu (YUM!) now and have a slice of blueberry pie to go?
You got it, tiramisu and a slice of blueberry pie for you. Yes, used the rhyming dictionary a lot with this form. Looking forward to reading it.
Thanks much. Cheers!
p.s. I just read your ballata and love your choice of “summer water” Beautiful use of the form ❤
Thank you!
You’re welcome ❤
Hi Grace! A challenging but interesting prompt.
Hi Punam. I hope you had fun writing the form. Looking forward to reading your poem. Thanks!
I did, Grace. 🙂
I loved your example poem. 🙂
Thank you.
My pleasure. 🙂
Thank you Grace for such a lovely form. I’ve had great fun with it.
Is the bar open yet? Can I have some chilled Prosecco?
Yes. Thanks for joining in. Here is some chilled prosecco for you. Hope you had fun writing this poem.
I did!!!
thank you Grace for this interesting prompt which paradoxically created the complete opposite of a dance in my poem
Hi Laura. You wrote an amazing moody ballata. The muse is what the muse wants. Thanks for joining in.
This sounds like fun. Can’t wait to try it.
Looking forward to reading your ballata. Thanks for joining in.
Hi everyone, happy Thursday! Thank you for hosting Grace. I love this poetic form! Writing to it I felt the joy I experienced writing lyrics for our songs over the years with my bands. It allows words to just flow naturally out of the imagination and off the tongue. Wonderful! 👍🏼🙂✌🏼🫶🏼
Hi Rob. Looking forward to reading it. Wonderful to see you experimenting and trying the ballata form.
Thanks for this prompt, Grace—it was a challenge to write in ballata form, but I enjoyed it in the end!
Thanks for joining in. Happy that found it fun and enjoyable. Always good to stretch our poetic muse.
I accidentally shared the link to my poem with ‘Murisopsis’s name… Sorry about that, Grace. If you could delete that entry, I’d appreciate it… I shared it under my own pen name as well immediately afterwards.
Thanks,
David
Hi David. No problem. Thanks for joining in.
What an interesting form Grace – many thanks for introducing it.
Hi Paul. You are welcome. Happy that you can join us for this writing challenge.
Thank you for an interesting challenge, Grace. 🙂
You are very welcome. Glad you had a fun writing this form.