the first stanza tells of soldiers relieved from their watch and are frozen by the cold. last line in 1st stanza is humorous as isnt the whole war gloomy for no reason?
2nd stanza refers to England by showing their life in the trenches is worse and that life and nature has merged in no man's land and the last line means that the war is unworthy of respect or consideration.
No, Paul Laurence Dunbar did not write the poem "How Did You Die." The poem is written by Edmund Vance Cooke. Dunn wrote renowned poems like "We Wear the Mask" and "Sympathy."
Edmund Spenser most famously wrote The Faerie Queene, an epic poem in honor of Queen Elizabeth I.
The Faerie Queen by Edmund Spenser from the time of Shakespeare may be the poem you are thinking of.
It has none. That's the meaning.
The meter of Edmund Spenser's poem "The Faerie Queene" is primarily iambic pentameter. This means that each line typically consists of five pairs of unstressed and stressed syllables. The poem also includes variations of meter to add variety and emphasis.
What poem?
The poet who wrote "The Faerie Queene" is Edmund Spenser. The epic poem is considered one of the great works of English literature and was first published in 1590.
Edmund Spenser wrote The Faerie Queen in 1590.
The poem "Go Lovely Rose" was written by Edmund Waller in around 1633. Waller was a prominent English poet during the 17th century.
To illustrate a poem means to draw a picture or pictures with your poem that you wrote.
Edmund Killingworth has written: 'A poem on the peace happily concluded between England, Spain, Holland and France, at Reswick, 1697. By Edmund Killingworth, B.A. and fellow of New College in Oxford' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Foreign relations, Peace, Poetry
The content of the poem determines what it means.