Falling Up I tripped on my shoelace
And I fell up--
Up to the roof tops,
Up over the town,
Up past the tree tops,
Up over the mountains,
Up where the colors
Blend into the sounds.
But it got me so dizzy
When I looked around,
I got sick to my stomach
And I threw down.
Are you talking about the Jack Frost poem?
Yes. Although some people say that it's only a book, it can be shortened into a few poems.
Gwendolyn Brooks published the poem We Real Cool in the September issue of Poetry and it was put in her book Selected Poems in 1963. She had already won a Pulitzer Award for Poetry for her 1949 book Annie Allen.
First they came for... Look up Martin Niemöller. there are a number of different versions of this poem attributed to him.
Instead of trying to have a poem made for you, try looking up lots of facts and rearranging the words to start with the letter. :)
In Shel Silverstein's "Falling Up," the poem "Forgotten Language" personifies a book and its desire to be read. The poem "Cloony the Clown" gives human-like qualities to a clown.
In Shel Silverstein's book called, conveniently, Falling Up. Here is a link to the Wikipedia page for a list of all the poems in that book: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falling_Up_(book) Also you can find falling up in your local libraries near you
"Falling Up" is a poetry book written by Shel Silverstein. He is known for his whimsical and thought-provoking poems that appeal to both children and adults.
"Falling Up" by Shel Silverstein uses various figurative language techniques, such as personification ("the sidewalk ends"), metaphor ("falling up" to represent going against the norm), and hyperbole ("The Water-proof Daffodils"). These devices help create a whimsical and imaginative tone in the poem.
A long verse poem that would contain lines about being bloodied but not falling would be called a long poem. Long poem are often thought to be poems that are book length, like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey.
shut up and get a life. SUCK IT UP AND READ THE BOOK!
Explain the meaning falling woods by pedagogic?
Rising action is the build up to the biggest problem in the book and the falling action is the loose ends from the big problem
green goblins falling down, but in the end they get up!
The Lewis Carroll poem that contains made-up words is "Jabberwocky." This poem is found in the book "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There."
There is no falling action in the book. the book jsut leaves you hanging
· Shall we use book in school?