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No, members of the lower classes are not the only ones who speak in prose instead of blank verse. In literature, prose is often used to depict everyday speech and dialogue, while blank verse is a form of poetry without rhyme. The use of prose or blank verse can vary depending on the character, the context, and the style of the writing.
Romeo doesn't speak in blank verse because he is in an excited and emotional state after meeting Juliet. His dialogue with his friends is informal and reflects his heightened emotions, so he speaks in prose instead of the more structured blank verse.
Prose to verse
Shakespeare had most of his characters speak in blank verse. He went into prose when the characters were of a lower class, or where the character is comic. For example, the Porter in Macbeth speaks in prose, when the rest speak in verse. The witches have a tendency to rhyme as well.
Prose is free speech put into blank verse, and verse is verses in iambic perameter.
It is called prose.
Just about everybody speaks in unrhymed verse called blank verse. Some minor characters never do, and many characters switch to ordinary prose from time to time, but most of them use blank verse as a rule.
Prose romance is a type of language using the natural flow of speech and ordinary grammatical structure instead of traditional poetry. It is found in magazines, films, and literature and examples are prose fiction and heroic prose.
No, a free verse poem does not rhyme and a prose is everyday words and sentences
False. Lots of characters speak in prose when they are not saying something serious, or when they are upset or disturbed. Note Hamlet (a Prince) in his entire conversation with Osric and Horatio in Act 5 Scene 2. Or Lear (a King) when talking in his madness with the blind Gloucester in Act 4 Scene 6.
"The Tale of Melibee" and "The Parson's Tale" were the two stories in the Canterbury Tales that were written in prose instead of verse.
Bottom uses prose while Titania uses blank verse in William Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Blank verse is often associated with the nobility or characters of higher social standing in Shakespeare's works, while prose is used for characters of lower status or for more casual speech.