well you can always write a poem about a frog!
It would be a good topic if you described it enough. You have to think about all the good things about fog, the mysteries and cool things about fog. Get to know your topic and put it in an outstanding poem. Do you see fog a lot? Do you hate it? Have you never seen fog? Imagine it or describe it. I would definitely take the opportunity to write a poem about fog.
James Herbert is the author of the novel "The Fog".
Yes. He published 13 books with Harcourt Brace. I think Fog the Magician was in his friend Louis Untermeyer's Golden Book of Poetry.
Without knowing which poem your are referring to no answer can be given
Sandburg's structure in the poem "Fog" is brief and repetitive, with short lines and three stanzas. The poem uses simple language and imagery to convey a sense of mystery and the ethereal quality of fog. The structure mirrors the gradual appearance and disappearance of fog, creating a sense of ebb and flow.
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner features an albatross. The bird appears to the sailors through an extremely dense fog.
WELL IT'S VERY SIMPLE A SIGHTED man couldn't find his way in the fog then a stranger(he's blind) lead him his way to his home
you cant ask me
Putting together the " yellow smoke", and the mention of Michelangelo" I have looked both up to find they refer to Rome. Micheelangelo's painting in the Sistine Chapel is in Rome, and they have yellow fog which is as thick as smoke.
prose
"Fog" by Carl Sandburg is written in free verse, as it does not adhere to a specific rhyme scheme or metrical pattern. Free verse allows for more flexibility in form, enabling the poet to focus on imagery and emotion.
Milton Geiger wrote "In the Fog" in 1942. The poem reflects themes of isolation and the complexities of human experience, capturing the mood of uncertainty prevalent during that time. Geiger's work often explores emotional depth and the human condition, and this piece is no exception.