Below are the lines from Sir Thomas Wyatt’s In Mourning Wise, which commemorates the five men who were executed as Anne Boleyn's lovers: her brother Lord Rochford, the courtiers Henry Norris, Francis Weston and William Brereton, and the court musician Mark Smeaton.
In mourning wise since daily I increase,
Thus should I cloak the cause of all my grief;
So pensive mind with tongue to hold his peace
My reason sayeth there can be no relief:
Wherefore give ear, I humbly you require,
The affect to know that thus doth make me moan.
The cause is great of all my doleful cheer
For those that were, and now be dead and gone.
Which of the following types of poem is exemplified above?