assonance
To answer your question, I'll need to see the stanza with the underlined portion. Can you provide the stanza?
This stanza is an example of consonance, where the repetition of the "s" sound in "sea-shells," "smiled," and "spoke" creates a subtle musical quality in the writing.
stanza
sestet
The sound device 'ch' repetition in "chilling and killing" in stanza 4 of "Annabel Lee" is an example of alliteration. Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words in close proximity, which can create a musical or rhythmic effect in poetry.
they are called verses eg:lady of shallot The divisions of a poem are often referred to as stanzas. The stanzas look like paragraphs that are not indented and have a space between them.
alliteration
A stanza is a section of a poem that consists of two or more lines. A paragraph is a section of writing that normally consists of five or more sentences.
Think of a canto in a poem as about the same as a chapter in a novel. It is a smaller portion, but not as small as a stanza, of a larger work.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "The Cry of the Children"
I love to write day and night
A stanza is a section of a poem, it can range from a, line, to whole paragraphs, depending on its melody. In Alexander Pushkin's poem "It's Time My Friend," the first section or the words between "It's time" and "abruptly die" comprise the first of the poem's two stanzas.
A five-stanza poem might be 20 lines long, broken into five sections of four lines each. There's no rule about how many sentences a poem (or a stanza) has to contain. An example of that would be: 1)I have a pet bat, 2)no not a cat, 3)who lives in a hat, 4)and lies on a mat, lines 1-4 go together in 1 stanza and this is how you repeat the rest to make your 5 stanza poem!