An epitaph is a statement, sometimes a poem, for a deceased person. It is sometimes written by the person to be used on his/her gravestone, and sometimes put on gravestones by others in the voice of the deceased. My Grave this is the last of her
there'll never be a cure
now she will be eaten by worms and bugs
she loved laughter and hugs
she really loved music
but she will always be basic
now her family will cry
while their faces turn dry
she always loved snow
like she always wear bows
she never loved the cold
but she always liked gold
but don't stand and weep
for it will make her true self deep
she will always be in your mind
because she will be easy to find
then you put r.i.p and put your name
what you can do is try to be creative and make your poems into shapes like a cross i usually did that but i didnt have time to make the cross
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- An epitaph is a commemoration (most commonly in the form of a song or poem) of a deceased person.
Epitaph poems came into being as short apt poems fit to be inscribed on tomb stones on burial sites. Collecting the epitaph poems scattered everywhere on granite slabs and tombs became an independent branch of literature. Not all epitaphs are severe, serious and grave. Many have been quite witty, which perfectly described the interesting character buried there. Gradually epitaph poems came to be written as literature, and not for the sole purpose of inscription on tombstones. Dr. Samuel Johnson wrote:
Here lies good master duck,
Whom Samuel Johnson trode on.
W. C. Fields, the great comedian and actor, is said to have placed the following, or something close to it, on his tombstone. It is an apocryphal story; this brilliant epitaph (he made countless jokes involving Philadelphia during his career) does not appear on his stone.
On the whole,
I'd rather be in Philadelphia
classical period
synecdoche
Naturalism
diary
Short Story
Memoir
Gilded age
Sarcasm
antithesis
journal
prose
chronological order
a work of literature that tells a story. (A+)
Seize the Day was written by Saul Bellow. Published in 1956, Seize the Day was Saul Bellow's fourth novel about a failed actor who has to come to terms with his own personality and failures.
A humorous poem about an unimportant matter.
The term is pen name.
refers to a daughter's relationship with her father