Stanzas are alike in that they are both units of poetry comprised of lines. They serve to organize and structure a poem, often centered around a common theme or idea. Additionally, stanzas are used to create a sense of rhythm and flow within a poem.
There are 8 stanzas
The plural of stanza is stanzas. As in "stanzas are found in poems".
I'm pretty sure there's 9 stanzas
121 verses that is 121 stanzas
Elegiac Stanzas was created in 1807.
there are 5 stanzas there are 10 lines
There are 6 stanzas in "in Paris with you" by James fenton
Two Stanzas, both 3 lines long.
Modern poetry and prose are identical in structure and diction. The only difference is that prose claiming to be poetry is artificially arrayed in "lines" and pseudo-stanzas on the page instead of honest paragraphs.
Free verse poems do not have specific rules or structures that dictate the use of stanzas. However, they may still contain stanzas if the poet chooses to organize the poem in that way for a specific effect or purpose. Ultimately, the decision to include stanzas in a free verse poem is left to the poet's discretion.
I read the first three stanzas of "Tyger."
A narrative can have any number of stanzas depending on the length and structure of the text. There is no specific rule dictating the number of stanzas in a narrative.