robāʿī, in Persian literature, genre of poetry consisting of a quatrain with the rhyme scheme aaba. Together with the mas̄navī (rhymed couplet), it is a purely Persian poetic genre and not a borrowing from the Arabic, as were the formal ode (qaṣīdah) and the love lyric (ghazal). It was adopted and used in other countries under Persian influence.
The examples of the robāʿī best known in the West are the robāʿiyyāt of Omar Khayyam, in the very free adaptation, selection, and translation by Edward FitzGerald, The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám.