In the poem "The Brook" by Alfred Lord Tennyson, examples of alliteration include "Babble and foam" and "High in the hills" where the repeated consonant sounds create a pleasing rhythm and emphasis.
"Babbling brook" - repetition of the "b" sound "Swiftly swaying silver salmon" - repetition of the "s" sound "Whispering willows" - repetition of the "w" sound "Gurgling gently" - repetition of the "g" sound "Merrily meandering" - repetition of the "m" sound
'I' in the poem the brook refers to 'the brook' which is a body of water.
The alliteration present in the rabbit poem is "busy bunny bouncing."
Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote the poem 'Brook'.
Beautiful ballsUsually upBest blowingBefore bouncingLift lightlyEasy to popSometimes slipperyI got it from a website though
no the brook has no imagery
Yes, there is alliteration in the poem "I Hear America Singing" by Walt Whitman. Examples of alliteration in the poem include "strong melodious songs," "singing each what belongs to him or her," and "singing with open mouths their strong melodious songs."
Tennyson's The Brook is a mid-length poem written in the form of a dramatic monologue. (Mid-length by nineteenth century standards: it is around 200 lines all told). The speaker seems to be a young woman who is remembering her lover who has left to travel abroad (a common theme with Tennyson).The poem intersperses lyric episodes in its blank verse narrative (another favourite technique with Tennyson) and has a wide range of poetic devices, including apostrophe(talking to an inanimate object as if it were a person):'O babbling brook,' says Edmund in his rhyme,'Whence come you?'and personification (the brook answers Edmund's question, by reciting the lyric:I come from haunts of coot and hern,I make a sudden sally&c.
An alteration can be done in different formats. The only thing that must be true for it to be an alliteration poem would be for it to have multiple instances where alliteration is used.
Yes, in the poem "Touched by an Angel" by Maya Angelou, there is alliteration present. An example of alliteration in this poem is "What you nourished has fled."
The phrase "We real cool" is an example of alliteration in the poem.