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No, the words clanging and banging demonstrate onomatopoeia, or when a word is a sound too. A metaphor is a comparison that does not use like or as. The passing of the seasons, as described from one stanza to the next (spring to winter), is a metaphor for the stages of life.
A very involved metaphor is often called an extended metaphor. This type of metaphor continues throughout a paragraph, stanza, or even an entire work, drawing out the comparison and exploring it in detail.
Happiness can be used as a metaphor to represent a state of contentment and wellbeing that brings lightness and positivity to a situation. For example, describing a sunny day as "filled with happiness" conveys a sense of warmth and joy that the weather brings.
A stanza is a group of lines in poetry that are separated by a space. It acts as a structural unit within a poem, and typically has a specific number of lines and a set rhyme scheme or meter. Stanzas help to organize the poem's ideas and aid in the flow of the text.
Metaphor is a figure of speech that describes a subject by directly comparing it to something else. For example, saying "His words were a soothing balm for her broken heart" uses metaphor to convey the idea that his words brought comfort in a powerful way. Metaphors can be a powerful tool in writing to evoke emotion and create vivid imagery.
a metaphor uses like or as
He used a metaphor to desciribe the swaying trees.
A line, or part of a line, that repeats later in the poem is called a refrain.Poetic forms that make use of a refrain include rondeaus, triolets and villanelles.
The use of personification in the first stanza of "Hanging Fire" shows that the speaker feels isolated and misunderstood. The image of the "walls to clean" expressing hatred suggests a feeling of detachment and alienation from the world around them.
simile its a simile when you use "like"
There is no such thing as a 94 stanza, it became the altima in 93.
I haven't met Arthur Holmes.