Yes, it is.
Most people say that poet Walt Whitman is the father of free verse poetry. He wrote what he felt without regard for conventional and preexisting style and formal format. In other words, he ignored "the rules." You can see free verse poetry by looking up the works of Walt Whitman. You can also type "Joseph C Parrish" into Youtube search to see approximately 99 samples of free verse poetry.
verse
Free verse is poetry that doesn't have a rhyme scheme or meter as is found in other forms of poetry.
Margery Doud has written: 'Father - An Anthology Of Verse' -- subject(s): Fathers, Poetry
onamatopoeia
To keep thing short and simple, It is called Free Verse. Jmoney is my name :)
free verse
No. Free verse poetry doesn't abide by any sort of rules- the writer decides everything about how the poem is written. Accidental poetry just refers to someone being poetic by accident. Free verse is a genre of poetry, but accidental is not.
A hybrid is a poetic style in which fuses modernist free verse poetry with classic rhyming poetry.
Yes, that's correct. "Verse" is often used interchangeably with "poetry" to refer to lines of writing that are typically arranged in a rhythmic pattern with a specific meter or structure.
A sad poem is a piece of verse, rhyming or not, that conveys a somber, melancholic mood. Emily Dickinson wrote a lot of sad poetry.
Poetry that doesn't rhyme but follows a regular metrical pattern is called blank verse.