Although as mentioned above masculine rhyme can have two syllables the major difference is the feminine rhyme always has two syllables and the stress is on the first syllable.
Every other line stops on a masculine rhyme. These metrical procedures are perfectly joined to the imagery.
Where a line ends with an accented syllable, it is deemed to have a strong ending and is thus described as masculine rhyme.
I think your choice of only masculine rhyme is a good one because it fulfills a terseness which is necessary in order to dispatch these observations you make.
What if I were to tell you that a masculine rhyme is blunt and obvious, while a feminine rhyme is more complex and delicate?
Definition of masculine rhyme in US English:
masculine rhyme
nounˈmæskjələn raɪm
Prosody
A rhyme of final stressed syllables (e.g., blow/flow, confess/redress).
I think your choice of only masculine rhyme is a good one because it fulfills a terseness which is necessary in order to dispatch these observations you make.
Although as mentioned above masculine rhyme can have two syllables the major difference is the feminine rhyme always has two syllables and the stress is on the first syllable.
Every other line stops on a masculine rhyme. These metrical procedures are perfectly joined to the imagery.
What if I were to tell you that a masculine rhyme is blunt and obvious, while a feminine rhyme is more complex and delicate?
Where a line ends with an accented syllable, it is deemed to have a strong ending and is thus described as masculine rhyme.