Lingering and repetition are both found most notably in stanzas 9 and 10. And here they are appropriately used to focus attention on one of the most moving parts of the situation-the ladies who wait for their knights who will never return.
The main idea expressed in the first two stanzas of "Sir Patrick Spens" is that the King is in need of a skilled sailor to undertake a dangerous mission of sailing to Norway. Despite warnings about the dangers of the journey, Sir Patrick Spens agrees to sail on the King's orders.
The king needs a sailor
"Sir Patrick Spens" is a ballad, a type of narrative poem that is typically meant to be sung or recited. It tells a story of a tragic sea voyage involving Sir Patrick Spens, a knight commissioned by the King of Scotland.
Sir Patrick Spens shows reluctance and dismay upon receiving the king's letter, as he knows the dangers of the journey. Despite his reservations, he ultimately agrees to undertake the mission out of a sense of duty and loyalty to the king.
I read the first three stanzas of "Tyger."
The Greek Hymn to Liberty writen in 1823 has 183 stanzas. The first two stanzas became the National Anthem of Greece
No
You did not specify which national anthem you are referring to in your question. The number of stanzas in the national anthem differs from country to country.
Its a poem that has 19 lines, based on the repetition of the first and third lines of the first stanza. It is made up of five tercets, and one quatrain. The rhyme scheme is aba in the first stanza, bba for the next four stanzas, and abaa for the final stanza. The final line of the second and fourth stanzas is the first line of the first stanza, while the final line of the third and fifth stanzas is the last line of the first stanza. For the final stanza, the first line of the first stanza is the third line, and the fourth is the final line of first stanza. A formal poem that uses extensive repetition
"To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell has three stanzas. Each stanza contains varying numbers of lines, with the first stanza having 20 lines, the second stanza having 12 lines, and the third stanza having 14 lines.
In the first two stanzas of "Casey at the Bat," the hometown baseball team is losing, and the crowd is desperate for a hero to turn things around. The legendary player, Casey, is described as strutting confidently to the plate, and the anticipation builds for him to save the day.
The emotion expressed in the first strophe is one of longing and yearning for a lost love.
Patrick not Ronald, well they named Patrick Henry after his father John Henry's brother (Patrick Henry's uncle) Patrick.
A Villanelle has 19 lines divided into 6 stanzas.The first 5 stanzas are tercets (three liness long).The sixth and final stanza is a quatrain(four lines long).