Your question would be easier to answer if we knew to which poem you are referring.
The poet protests in the second stanza as a means to challenge injustice, express dissent, or advocate for change. It is a way for the poet to voice opposition to something they find unacceptable or wrong, using their words as a form of resistance or critique.
The Photograph is a poem by Shirley Toulson. It refers to a woman looking at a photo of her mother. The first stanza is about the childhood of the poet's mother; the second: her childhood with her mother; and last: the poet's adult life without her mother.
what is a sentence for stanza well here's your answer:The third stanza of the poem gives us a clear picture of the poet's thinking.hope I helped you guys out!!♥
In the last stanza of "To a Waterfowl" by William Cullen Bryant, the poet is referring to the waterfowl itself. He is marveling at how the bird continues to navigate its journey with grace and determination, despite facing uncertainty and danger.
The poet describes a peaceful meadow with flowers blooming and a gentle breeze blowing through the trees.
yes. in the third stanza the poet describes it as happy, carefree etc.
The second stanza of A Valediction Forbidding mourning states intense displays of emotions in that stanza.
The name [ode] comes from a Greek word meaning [something which is sung]. In an ode the poet invents a new stanza, and then repeats the stanza as many times as he needs to complete the poem. We don't normally call it an ode if the poet uses a stanza type which is already well known (so a poem in quatrains or couplets is not an ode). Most odes are patterned on the odes of Pindar (a Greek poet who specialised in ode writing) and a special feature of the stanza is that it features both long and very short lines.
The first line of the second stanza of Poe's "The Raven" is "Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December."
Look at the 3rd line in the first stanza, the 4th line in the second stanza, and the 1st line in the fourth stanza.
The rhyming pattern is ABAB.
An alcaic is a poetic verse form, a four-line stanza supposedly invented by the Greek lyrical poet Alcaeus.
In the first stanza, the speaker stands before an ancient Grecian urn and addresses it. He is preoccupied with its depiction of pictures frozen in time.