Well since you aren't very specific, here are some ideas...
For a winter-related poem: Swirling Snowflakes; Wonders of Winter; Winter Blossoms
For a depressing, sad poem: Passionate Tears; Depression
For a happy, uplifting poem: True Happiness Is...; Angel of the Sun; Optimism
You leave it kind of unspecific, so those are just a few random, out-of-the-blue ideas.
Generally, no they are not.
Titles of short poems, articles, and songs are typically set off by quotation marks.
The Ballot or the Bullet
Song titles, like the titles of poems, should be placed in quotation marks.
the brook and that's it i know......
www.ghazal.org has some really neat ideas for poems www.ghazal.org has some really neat ideas for poems
These are not the titles of any poems by Shakespeare. His poems are either called Sonnet (with a number), Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece, or The Phoenix and the Turtle. There is also a poem called A Lover's Complaint attributed to him.
I would use single quotation marks, as for titles of poems.
Titles of poems should be put in inverted commas (quotation marks).
The Odyssey and Iliad are both epic poems. While short poems are quoted in writing, epic poems are underlined do to their length.
Langston Hughes wrote many poems during his time. Some of his poems include Ardella, Daybreak in Alabama, Cultural Exchange, Acceptance and Bad Morning.
help you understand the ideas in the poem