Example of alliteration are An angle-worm (a) And ate (a) Drank a dew (d) Looked like (l)
The short poem entitled, "A Bird Came Down the Walk" tells of an encounter with a bird eating a worm. The poem was published in 1891 by Emily Dickinson.
A Bird Came Down I Have a Bird in Spring I Heard a Fly Buzz
An example of alliteration would be: Sally came to the sea shore to sell shorts and flip flops.
One example of short meter in Emily Dickinson's poetry is the poem "Because I could not stop for Death." The poem follows a syllabic pattern of 8,6,8,6 in each stanza, creating a short and structured meter that contributes to the poem's rhythmic flow and overall impact.
An example of alliteration would be: Sally came to the sea shore to sell shorts and flip flops.
Emily Dickinson wrote the poem.https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/56593
The climax of "A bird came down the walk" by Emily Dickinson can be considered to be when the bird allows the speaker to feed it from her hand, showing a moment of intimacy and connection between the wild bird and the human observer. This scene represents a peak moment of interaction and wonder in the poem.
Some sweet smells are wafting through the kitchen door.
The first two stanzas of the poem are a simple description of the bird, not knowing it is being watched by the poet, being a bird. The third stanza is where Dickinson really hits her stride. The bird's "rapid eyes...hurried all abroad" is a darn good description of a bird on alert for predators. And while comparing the bird's eyes to "Beads" seems to make the bird less alive the fact that the beads are "frightened," while perhaps overly humanizing the bird, captures the look I've seen birds have when they noticed my presence (though the non-poetical would probably use "wary" as the adjective). The bird must have been made wary by Dickinson coming forward to offer it a crumb.The bird, of course, refuses the crumb and "unrolled his feathers / And rowed him softer home." Anyone who has seen crows fly across the sky can appreciate comparing birds' wings in flight to oars: in fact the simplest way I was taught to remember what a crow looks like in flight is "Row, row, row, your crow."But Dickinson takes the analogy of the bird's wings rowing through the air a step further and tiptoes towards whimsy when she extends her metaphor to "Butterflies, off Banks of Noon, / Leap, plashless, as they swim." The sky becomes the sea and butterflies, at high noon, leap into the air without a splash, a delightful image to this poetry-aficionado and a wonderful way to end the poem."A bird came down the walk----" by Emily Dickinson
No, it isn't. an alliteration is a repeated consonant sound at the beginning of a word. for example :peter piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. the repeated "p" sound makes it an alliteration
A bird landed on the path was the paraphrasing of "a bird came down the walk."
Her poems are all numbered, and often are refered to as the first few words of the poem. Here is a website that has a few of her poems. http://www.everypoet.com/archive/poetry/Emily-Dickinson/emily-dickinson-poems-contents.htm