The boys want to be defined by their rebellious actions.
If you mean "We Real Cool," it was written by Gwendolyn Brooks
Gwendolyn Brooks
the great depression
The rhyme scheme for the ballad "Ballad of the Cool Fountain" is typically AABB or ABAB, with alternating rhyming lines throughout the poem.
The phrase "We real cool" is an example of alliteration in the poem.
The pool hall in Gwendolyn Brooks' poem "We Real Cool" is simply referred to as "The Golden Shovel." It serves as a symbolic setting representing the lifestyle and choices of the young men who frequent it.
I'm not sure if that was a typo or not but if you meant We Real Cool, the author is Gwendolyn Brooks. If there's a poem called You Real Cool and I just don't know about it, I'm sorry I have no clue...
Until this year, I had not read Gwendolyn Brooks beyond a few anthologized poems, most notably and ubiquitously, “We Real Cool.” This particular poem has such a breezy voice, I mistook this for the tone of Brooks’ poems in general; rather, the poem is indicative of her work in a different way: she is a master of creating tone that reflects each poem’s characters.
The tone of "We Real Cool" by Gwendolyn Brooks is detached, defiant, and provocative. The use of slang, shortened lines, and repeated refrain creates a sense of urgency and rebelliousness in the poem.
Gwendolyn Brooks published the poem We Real Cool in the September issue of Poetry and it was put in her book Selected Poems in 1963. She had already won a Pulitzer Award for Poetry for her 1949 book Annie Allen.
Yes, Gwendolyn Brooks has 2 kids.
no.