Meters in a poem!! What does that mean now. There is none.
A compound poem is a poem that has two or more predicate
It rather depends on what you call a poem. If you define a poem as anything someone claims to be a poem, then let me share with you a poem I just wrote:A Poem Expressing Every Individual's Unique PerspectiveIYou can't get shorter than that.
The printed poem about church homecoming can be found at link below.
I want the summary of the poem GULL written by mark mcwatt
I'm not sure what the poem is, but the movie is titled "Marley and Me", and if you want to find out what the poem is it might be in the book, which the movie is based off of.
sadness
Yes, "Apparently with no Surprise" by Emily Dickinson is a free verse poem. This means it does not follow a specific rhyme scheme or metrical pattern, allowing the poet more freedom in expressing their ideas.
"Apparently with no Surprise" by Emily Dickinson uses personification, symbolism, and irony as literary elements. The personification of nature and death as active forces, the symbolic representation of death as a gentle presence, and the use of irony to depict death as unsurprising and expected all contribute to the poem's evocative imagery and theme.
The title of the the story" bestseller"looks as if it is going to show praising for best sellers but different from this the main protagonist of the story 'john A pescud' criticizes bestsellers.
A Surprise (you spelled it wrong) Poem is when it leads you to think one thing and then it hits you at the end with something you never thought of. example: A poem about someone teaching in class then on the last lines saying "i would have missed the next class to if my students hadn't woken me up" saying that it's the teacher while al along you thought it was talking about the student.
Apparently a poem story that ends happy?
The answer depends on which poem you're reading. It could be joy, anger, sorrow, humor, confusion, surprise, fear, etc.
I am a sonnet, apparently.
Apparently it's Graham Taylor!
The term for a 14-line love poem that usually ends with a surprise ending is a "sonnet." Sonnets typically follow specific rhyme schemes and structures, with different variations such as the Petrarchan, Shakespearean, or Spenserian sonnet.
A surprise ending is characteristic of the poem "Richard Cory." It's debatable whether Richard Cory has a surprise ending (anyone familiar with E A Robinson's other poems saw it coming a mile off) - but I suppose teachers don't read a lot of poetry.
which ghazal poem are you on about as there are many of them.