If all the islands were apple pie,
and all the oceans were ink?
Then all good children would plenty to eat
but what would they do for drink?
A poem may contain questions to engage the reader by prompting them to think critically and reflect on the theme of the poem. Questions can create a sense of curiosity, evoke emotion, or challenge the reader's perspective. They can also add depth and complexity to the poem by inviting interpretation and inviting the reader to participate in the meaning-making process.
No but you can put question in any kind of poem.
yes
First I would read the poem to My friends. then I would ask them questions like "What did they like about your poem?" "How did your poem make them feel?" "Can you relate to My Poem?" " Is there anything they didn't understand?" " what would they do to improve your poem if anything, and Why?"
Anyone who is looking to locate answers to the questions from the poem No Men Are Foreign by James Kirkup assignment will not be able to via the internet. The poem will have to be studied in order to locate the answers.
A curiosity poem is a poem made up of questions based on a certain topic.
The poet uses the word 'splash' when she describes how she would paint a sunrise on the
It is a poem that generally asks a person, place or thing questions.
Few Questions {This poem is also been translated to Nepali Language by the poem author Ananda Adhikari}.
Your teacher would much rather have a poem you wrote yourself - trust me! The fact that you cared enough to try to write a poem is going to be a better present than if you copied something down.Click on the related questions to see how to write your own poem - you don't have to write like Shakespeare to write a good short poem!
THIS WEBSITE IS WASTE OF TIME
Some questions you could use in teaching the poem "Chicago" by Carl Sandburg would be: 1. How does Sandburg describe the city of Chicago to make it feel "alive" to the reader? 2. How does the poem describe the effects of urban industrialism at the beginning of the 20th century? 3. How is the Chicago of today different from the Chicago that Sandburg described? How is it the same?
Some good questions about "Spellbound" by Emily Bronte could be: What themes are prominent in the poem? How does Bronte utilize imagery to create a sense of enchantment? What is the significance of the repeated use of the word "spellbound" in the poem? How does the speaker's tone change throughout the poem?
We provide answers to specific questions.
The poem "By Sundown" is a work by a fictional character in a virtual world, so there are no definitive questions or answers associated with it. The poem evokes a sense of mystery and discovery as the speaker encounters a hidden village at dusk, leaving the interpretation open to the reader's imagination.