Sure...
Ode to you, my beautiful sun!
You shine as if a victory has been won!
When you rise above the hills,
I simply shiver, and get the chills.
I see your rays, shining bright,
Showing off your glorious light!
Without you, I don't know what I'd do;
Everything beautiful would be through.
As you shine across the water,
I see a playful tiny otter.
And so, my beautiful shining one,
I shall see you tomorrow, for the day is done.
you would have to write an ode.
Nothing, it is meaningless since ode is a noun not a verb. An ode is a poem in praise of something so one could write and ode to a food.
Friedrich Schiller wrote the poem "Ode to Joy" in 1785.
Bacchus Ode to Beauty
for her brother
feelings, for example the ode to JOY.
Ludwig van Beethoven was inspired to write "Ode to Joy" after reading Friedrich Schiller's poem of the same name. Beethoven was deeply moved by the message of universal brotherhood and joy in the poem, which led him to compose his famous Symphony No. 9 with the "Ode to Joy" as its final movement.
beethoven wrote the ninth simphony on piano
No, the line "At the going down of the sun and in the morning, we will remember them" is from the "Ode of Remembrance" taken from Laurence Binyon's poem "For the Fallen." Rudyard Kipling did not write this particular line.
roses are red violets are blue the cookie monster is cool and so are you
"Ode to an Enchanted Light" uses images of nature such as sprouting trees, splashing fountains, and the sun setting behind the hills. These images evoke a sense of beauty, tranquility, and wonder in the poem.
Anything that you find likeable, but would work nicley with school criteria. usually about mourning...