Someone is being very clever.
Yes there are probably a few words for striped. All I can think of is Lined!
The possessive form of the plural noun kings is kings'.Example: All of the kings' portraits lined the hall.
A long poem can be called an epic poem.
...a something? ok then,..um, a something of poems,..hmmmm i guess really all you have to do is start with what you want to do for a poems perhaps a collection strung together with a single connection or more, next you start with a title that you think would inspire or would catch somebody's eye if it had no cover. Then you write what you feel would be a great start to you poem, it does not have to rime! Some of the greatest poems are mass collections of inspiring mixtures! then you write onwards, you write what you feel! just make sure it makes sense,....But remember as my mom has always told me,..CAPITALS! periods too,..cause otherwise it's more a list of never ending words! chbi pce!JB
There is a poem that says if you "Find a penny, pick it up, then all day long you'll have good luck. " This poem is believed to come from a popular almanac from the 1930s.
the stanzas are all of the same length
Edward Kamau Brathwaite wrote Limbo to describe the pain the West African slaves went through on the ships. How they were in darkness and also how no matter what they did they couldn't escape all they could here was their heart beating in the rhythm of limbo.
The first stanza is AABBCCDDEEFFGG All the rest of the stanzas are ABCB
The poem "Expect Nothing" by Alice Walker follows an inconsistent rhyme scheme, with some stanzas having no rhyme at all, while others contain rhyming couplets or alternate rhymes. This lack of a consistent rhyme scheme reflects the themes of unpredictability and impermanence in the poem.
Various sources tell you about the structure of the poem. For instance, sometime line counts tell you; a poem of 14 lines will be a sonnet. The making of lines, the rhyme scheme, the flow of verse etc determine the structure of a poem.
A stanza can be any number of lines that go to make up a part of the poem, where as a line is just one line contained within the stanza. There can be any number of stanzas in a poem each containing many lines, usually the same number.
WH Auden wrote a poem called "Stop All The Clocks" - is this the one you mean? Tks, this is the poem. It is so touching.
No, they are very rarely lined up.
A. The stanzas have an irregular number of lines that is not repeated from stanza to stanza.B. It rhymes.C. It does not use line breaks.D. All of the above.
the poem is based around life's involvement on a growing family,It describes a wives believes that all her labour is beneficial to the ones she loves, her family, reaching out the audiences sympathy for motherhood, the author also uses adjectives to create this effect. There are 4 stanzas in the poem; each stanza is in chronological order in family ageing. For this reason the language of the poem is very informative and simple, reaching an audience of the common housewives so that the readers can easily relate.
Yes. Many contemporary poets write poems that have no stanza breaks. Many writers, like Poet Laureate Kay Ryan for example, write one stanza poems. Patience by Kay Ryan is one example of a one stanza poem. Read it here: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/20263
Couplets are two-line stanzas that rhyme. To write a poem with couplets, you can structure it by having each stanza consist of two lines that rhyme and convey a complete thought or image. The rhyme scheme for couplets is typically AABB or AA BB. Using couplets can create a rhythm and flow in the poem.