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Robert Frost made use of Rubaiyat in chain rhyme form in his poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." Chain rhyme also known as “chain verse or interlocking rhyme" is a type of poetic technique where the poet uses the last syllable of a line and repeats it as the first syllable of the line following. Although the syllable is repeated, it ...
Together, via email, they formulated the following guidelines for this innovative genre of collaborative poetry writing: Each poet composes a poem on a title chosen by one of them and without any discussion as to the theme of the poem. The poems are exchanged and then have to be woven into one seamless, flowing piece that can stand on its own.
The MediaWiki software suppresses single newlines and converts lines starting with a space to preformatted text in a dashed box. HTML suppresses multiple spaces. It is often desirable to retain these elements for poems, lyrics, mottoes, oaths and the like.
There is an active urge to capture the living breath of things, but he also allows sorrow into his poems." [2] Kate Kellaway of The Observer wrote "Human Chain is about inheritance – in the fullest sense of the word. If it were a poet such as Philip Larkin writing, human chain would mean "man hands on misery to man".
"Broken in fortune, but in mind entire" Poems Composed or Suggested during a Tour in the Summer of 1833 1835 Tynwald Hill 1833 "Once on the top of Tynwald's formal mound" Poems Composed or Suggested during a Tour in the Summer of 1833 1835 Despond who will--'I' heard a voice exclaim 1833 "Despond who will—I heard a voice exclaim,"
It is produced by dividing a word at the line break of a poem to make a rhyme with the end word of another line. Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem The Windhover, for example, divides the word "kingdom" at the end of the first line to rhyme with the word "wing" ending the fourth line. Hopkins is rare in using the device in serious poems.
A code poem may be interactive or static, digital or analog. Code poems can be performed by computers or humans through spoken word and written text. Examples of code poetry include: poems written in a programming language, but human readable as poetry; computer code expressed poetically, that is, playful with sound, terseness, or beauty.
Pavel Sokolov emphasized not the moralizing aspect of La Fontaine's fable, but the sensitive "sensibility". According to Likhachev, Pushkin, in his poems, responded primarily to the “sensibility” of Tsarskoye Selo's nature, both through poetic sketches of Lorrain's landscapes and “the free philosophy contained in them”. [55]