Oscar Wilde - he is most famous for his story the happy prince though.
If you are asking how many prisoners passed through the gaol its about 50,000
3
Examples of ballads include the following poems:The Man from Snowy River by 'Banjo' PatersonClancy of the Overflow by 'Banjo' PatersonThe Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Coleridge TaylorBallad of Reading Gaol by Oscar Wilde
A 'ballad' is basically a story poem, but one which tells only the main points of a story. Ballads usually have little or no characterisation, and very limited description of people or places. A ballad just cuts to the chase: like a cartoon or an action film. In English, many ballads are written in Ballad Metre. But you don't have to write a ballad in Ballad Metre, it is the way you tell the story that makes your poem a ballad. Southey wrote many ballads. The Inchcape Rock is a good example: a simple story, simply told. Southey gives very little time to describing where the story happens, or what the characters in his story are thinking:- he just gets on with the tale.
The Ballad of Desmond Kale has 638 pages.
The Ballad of Abu Ghraib has 304 pages.
The Ballad of Matthew's Begats has 32 pages.
it does not matter how many lines
Two. :)
it does not matter how many lines
it does not matter how many lines
Kilmainham Gaol opened on May 17, 1796. Located in Dublin, Ireland, it served as a prison for many notable political prisoners throughout its history, particularly during Ireland's struggle for independence. The gaol was officially closed as a prison in 1924 and has since been preserved as a museum.