15 pages 30 minutes read

John Keats

Meg Merrilies

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1818

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

Literary Devices

Form, Meter, and Rhythm

“Meg Merrilies” is a literary ballad, a poetic form based on popular narrative songs that often concentrated on a single hero (or heroine) and their story. Traditionally, English ballads were meant to be sung. As such, they often have a musical quality about them.

Keats’s poem consists of six rhymed quatrains, or sections of four lines. It concludes with a slightly longer final stanza that tacks on an extra two lines. It is written in the common meter traditional of ballads, which means the lines alternate between four-stresses (iambic tetrameter) and three-stresses each (iambic trimeter). These lines are called “iambic” because they are made up of iambs, a metrical foot that consists of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.

A typical, two-line unit in “Meg Merrilies” scans like this (stressed syllables in bold):

Her ap- | ples were | swart black- | ber-ries,

Her cur- | rants pods | o’ broom

Like other ballads, its rhyme scheme is ABCB, which means the second and fourth lines of each quatrain rhyme, but the first and third do not.

Related Titles

By John Keats

SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image
SuperSummary Logo
Study Guide
John Keats
Guide cover image