Here’s how to cite a poem with no line number: ScenarioExample Citation 📄 No Line Numbers, Use Page Number “I am in love with this world / Which spared me” (Oliver, 1992, p. 44). 🌐 No Line or Page Numbers (Online) “Let us go then, you and I” (Eliot, 1915). And...
(A)16. -How do you like my poem Moonlight?-I am ___it. It's about the beauty of nature. A. interested in B. worried about C. thankful for D. sure of 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 答案见上A【解析】考查形容词短语辨析。句意为:——你觉得我的诗《月光》 怎么样?——我对它...
Do NOT submit poems here, instead go to the Submit Poem form. * Indicates required fields Name: Email: Not published Submission: Between 50 - 1000 Characters STOP! Did you spell check your submission? Common Mistakes: the word "i" should be capitalized, "u" is not a word, and "im...
An AABB pattern quatrain poem has first and second lines with a set of rhyming words, and third and fourth lines with a different set of rhyming words. You probably recognize this poem: Lesson Summary Register to view this lesson Are you a student or a teacher? I am a student I am a...
Poem by Langston Hughes I loved my friend. He went away from me. There’s nothing more to say. The poem ends, Soft as it began— I loved my friend. Poetry is Language at its Richest and Most Condensed Unlikelonger prose writing(such as a short story, memoir, or novel), poetry needs...
T hat April-共和国广告广告Lock th e Door-I will not b e pursued-H e stayed away a year to call.When I am occupied -But trifles(琐事) look so trivial(不重要的)-As soon as you hav e come.T his lovely poem was written by Emily Dickin son, who is considered a major American ...
I rise Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear I rise Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave, I am the dream and the hope of the slave. I rise I rise I rise. Rhyme With poetry, rhythm and rhyme go hand in hand. Both create musicality in the poem, making it pleasurable to rec...
4. [福建中考]—How do you like my poem(诗)Moonlight?—I am___ it. It's about the beauty of
Brubeck, Tom
If the poem itself is difficult to understand, don’t worry—its references are rather obscure. L.E.L. refers to the poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon, who often wrote about love or its absence. Zantippe, more commonly spelled Xanthippe, was the wife of Socrates and, reportedly, had a sharp...