It would be a fable put into verse such as this one of the Ant and the Grasshopper:
During Summer, Grasshopper was having fun
When he spied Ant toiling under the sun
"Hey Ant," he said, "Please come and play."
But Ant said, "No, I must work today."
"I'm storing food if Winter came,
I recommend you do the same."
But Grasshopper only had this comment,
"There is heaps of food at present."
Winter comes and food is nought
Dying is he, a lesson taught.
He sees Ant and his food-full store
And he wished that he had listened more.
It is a fable. Fable means that the story is about animals. For example, the story is about talking animals, that explains it.
An example of a moral from a fable could be "slow and steady wins the race" from the fable of "The Tortoise and the Hare." This moral emphasizes the importance of perseverance and diligence in achieving goals.
oblivion and... runescape
Not always. A fable may have a moral, or it may not. Aesop's Fables usually had a moral.
I know the words for the chorus but not the verse. Shakespeare wrote in verse.
your edge
vvyyucu
tortoise and the hare
The ghost story was nothing more than a fable. They taught the lesson in the form of a fable.
The lion and the cat, the crocodile and the peahen..
An example of an unrhymed verse is found in free verse poetry, which does not follow a strict rhyme or meter pattern. In free verse, the lines do not necessarily rhyme or have a structured rhythm, allowing for more flexibility and creativity in expressing ideas and emotions.
The verse should be identified by book and then chapter and verse number within that chapter. For example John 3:16 refers to the Book of John, 3rd chapter, 16th verse.