The poem ‘Refugee Blues’ is a Blue Ballad which explains his character. In Britain and Ireland, Ballads were famous till the 18th century, whereas the African-American form of ballads called Blues arose by the end of the 19th century. The poet, who was a British who migrated to the USA uses two basic techniques to carry out the beauty, which sings about the sufferings and sorrows of the Jewish Refugees. In this poem, the metre he used is similar to the ones he used in ‘Calypso’, which was written in 1930. The Ballads were famous forms of verse which were narrative in the middle age, while the Blues is an African-American music category which contains a strong pattern based on the use of a rhyme scheme which is simple and has repetitions. In every stanza, the first two lines rhyme with each other, called a tercet, while the third line provides a repetitive pattern using the phrase “my dear”, which is repeated in every third line providing consistency to the entire poem. It is very interesting to see that the first word in every stanza is a verb. This poem is a first-person narrative in informal and colloquial language.