&glosstext=<b>INTERNAL RHYME:</b><br><br>When a word at the end of one line rhymes (or half rhymes) with a word in the middle of the next line. Here is an example from Wilfred Owen's 'Dulce et Decorum est'.<br><br>		Gas! GAS! Quick, boys! - An ecstasy of <b>fumbling</b><br>		Fitting the <b>clumsy</b> helmets just in time;<br>		But someone still was yelling out and <u>stumbling</u>,<br>		And <u>flound'ring</u> like a man in fire or lime.<br><br>The internal rhyme also speeds up the pace of the lines when <B>'fumbling'</B> is followed quickly by <B>'clumsy'</B>, and again with <B>'stumbling'</B> followed by <B>'flound'ring'</B>. It also helps to imitate the soldier's sense of confusion during the gas attack.