wotchoo torkin bout Bob
Zondrae. Rhyme is a sort of musical decoration , there is plenty of metred poetry that has no rhyme there is some free verse that includes rhyme. Rhyme does not make poetry. Poetry does not need to be rhymed, RHYME IS OPTIONAL.
Most metred verse has regular measured beats ( or accents or stresses ) and most metred verse has regular line breaks, that is the lines are mostly the same length.
METRE IS NOT OPTIONAL. POETRY IS METRED VERSE. Well that's my manifesto.
In free verse all poetic devices can be present, alliteration, rhyme, consonance, repeats,
heightened language and SHOULD HAVE a pattern of stresses or accents.
The difference with free verse is that the writer devises a pattern of their own to place the line lengths, the line breaks and the patterns of accents. this is done according to the writers own choices not to a predetermined pattern as in , say, ballad form which is common in bush poetry.
Some free verse seems to have abandoned any commitment to metre and in my opinion this is bad verse. My belief is that any verse, to be poetry, MUST have some metric structure.
In the verse posted here, if you read it carfefully noting the accents, you will see that it does not have a regular pattern. Hence I suggested that the writer may have intended to use an informal pattern of his own devising.