a poem
A metaphor poem can have any number of stanzas, as it depends on the poet's choice and the structure of the poem. The focus in a metaphor poem is on conveying an idea or emotion through metaphorical language, rather than on a specific stanza count.
j
No, Mother To Son by Langston Hughes does not have personification. However, the whole poem is basically a huge metaphor.
A poem is a poem it has a name for a reason it may contain metaphors or personification so can it be called extended personification ? Well probably only if you have personification in it then call it what ever you want
The first paragraph of a poem is commonly known as a stanza. It is a group of lines that form a unit in a poem, similar to a paragraph in prose writing. Stanzas can vary in length and structure depending on the poem's form and style.
The figurative language in the poem "The Freedom of the Moon" includes personification, metaphor, and symbolism. Personification is used to give human qualities to the moon, metaphor compares the moon to freedom, and symbolism represents the moon as a source of liberation and inspiration.
A simile, metaphor, personification, rhyme and alliteration are 5 poetic devices
"The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe is a poem that includes alliteration, assonance, rhyme, metaphor, personification, and symbol. "The Tyger" by William Blake features alliteration, metaphor, rhyme, rhythm, and symbolism. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost contains metaphor, personification, rhyme, rhythm, and symbolism.
The poem "Saturday at the canal" by Gary Soto consists of four stanzas. Each stanza follows a different aspect of the narrator's experience at the canal on a Saturday.
Verses. When you write a song the lines are called verses not stanzas. Stanzas is a line in a poem.
The rhyme scheme for each stanza in the poem "Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead" by Alfred Lord Tennyson is ABAB. This pattern continues throughout the four stanzas in the poem.
If you were writing a poem, or using personification, or a metaphor, then yes. Otherwise, ask your English professor.