Poetic Techniques is what the poet uses in his/her poems. E.g. Rhythm, alliteration, iambic pentameter etc.
Alliteration and the use of techniques
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In the first three lines of Lowell's poem, he uses alliteration (repetition of the "l" sound in "listening, hardly, and longing"), as well as imagery ("darkness") and personification ("we sit, you and I"). These techniques work together to create a sense of intimacy and anticipation in the poem.
the answer to this question is narrative poem
reading poetry
sibilance
the techniques used in the poem anthem for doomed youth is shown in the first stanza where Wilfred Owen writs "bells for those who die like cattle" in this sentence it contrast with a normal funeral ceremony and death at a battlefield where no one cares if you die in this Poem the poet also discusses the multitude of people being slaughtered the rhetorical question Wilfred Owen has asked has a lot of dramatic effect on the poem the techniques used in The poem are onomatopoeia (rifles rattle) alteration sad shires compare and contrast rhyming words rhetorical questions
To intentionally create a bad poem, one can use cliches, forced rhymes, inconsistent meter, and lack of imagery or emotion. By neglecting poetic techniques and creativity, a bad poem can be easily crafted.
there are 63 syllables whith 4 paragraphs and 18 language techniques
Imagery, 2nd Person Point of Vew, Enjambment
No... Joke, every poem has poetic features & techniques. This poem has a rhyming scheme of ababcdcdefefgg. It is a Shakespearian Sonnet. It also has a fixed rhythm, giving the poem a strong sense of movement whilie also making the lines more memorable. He uses many metaphors, the main one being comparing his wife to a summer's day.
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost is a good example of a poem with many techniques. It uses imagery to evoke the scene of a snowy evening, alliteration and rhyme to create a musical quality, and personification in the portrayal of the woods as "lovely, dark, and deep." The poem also explores themes of nature, isolation, and the passage of time.