Line 10.
knew, rhymes with lines 2 & 4. There's no law carved on stone that says every second line has to rhyme.
Partial rhymes are a well established mode of verse. Reading a lot of poetry including the traditional bush poets will show you that. For some reason latter day bush poets have been convinced that anything other than full rhyme is somehow second rate or bad rhyme, that's nonsense.
I've tried to make the metre run as best I can, which is much more important than any rhyming schemes. Rhyme in poetry is optional, the organising principle of metre is not optional, even in so-called free form. I hear and see a lot of bush poetry that has careful rhyming schemes attached to stuff that is woefully inadequate as metric construction. The bush poetry comp judges have, a few times, commented on that fault.
It was only something I did off the cuff after meeting my mate and his new bride, if you can put out of your mind that it must conform to some imagined Banjo Paterson template, change your point of view a bit, I think it should work OK.
Hopefully a little snapshot of an old rugged stockman/bush poet, getting married at 85 is more than worrying about a couple of rhyming words.
By the way, my mate Bill can stride down the street better than a bloke half his age. He's got a real spring in his step these days.
