An untitled poem can be identified by its first line.
No! Obviously, you can't unless it is related. It should be your choice!
* If the word occurs at the beginning of a sentence. * If it's part of a title, e.g. the title of a an essay, a poem, a novel ...etc.
No, the title of a poem is enclosed by inverted commas (eg 'The Hollow Men' by TS Eliot) but the title of a book-length text - for example a novel or a volume of poems - is always italicised (eg The Skylight by Robert Gray).
Treat the title of a speech in the same way as you would treat the title of a poem. Personally, I'd use single inverted commas for both, but there are alternative conventions.
If chosen correctly, the title of an essay should reveal the subject matter of the essay.
Well the title of your essay will be the topic that you chose to write about.
If you are writing something else and referring to an essay you have written, you would put the title of that essay in quotation marks, but the title at the top of your essay (like the title of any document) should not have quotation marks.
freedom essay
You can start the essay with a poem related to that topic
I think you can do an adequate job of selecting the title. One way is to write the outline of the essay then pick a major point or conclusion of the essay and derive a title from that.
The long poem An Essay On Man was written by Alexander Pope.
"Big Brother is Watching... but Who's Watching Big Brother?"