Qasida

A qasida (also spelled qasidah) in Arabic "قصيدة", in Persian قصیده, is a form of poetry from pre-Islamic Arabia. It typically runs more than 50 lines, and sometimes more than 100. It was later inherited by the Persians, where it became a rhymeless poem of more than 100 lines and was used and developed immensely.

[1]. Properly, either all the lines rhyme [2], or every second line of the four-line verse rhymes [3].

The pre-Islamic qasida maintained a single elaborate meter throughout the poem, and every line rhymed. These poems are considered some of the most elaborate in the world.

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See also: Qasida, Arabia, Islam, Meter (poetry), Persia, Persian language, Poetry, Rhyme