Respuesta :
Answer:Your answer should include the following points:
Sara Teasdale’s “Places” is a lyric poem. It discusses the narrator’s personal feelings about the places she loves: “Places I love come back to me like music, / Hush me and heal me when I am very tired;”
Teasdale follows a regular rhyming pattern in “Places”:
A blue and white dazzling light on everything one sees,
The ice-covered branches of the hemlocks sparkle
Bending low and tinkling in the sharp thin breeze,
Teasdale uses vivid description to discuss nature:
I know a bright world of snowy hills at Boonton,
A blue and white dazzling light on everything one sees,
The ice-covered branches of the hemlocks sparkle
Bending low and tinkling in the sharp thin breeze,
Carl Sandburg’s “Chicago” is a free-verse poem. It doesn’t follow any clear rhyme or rhythm pattern, and the lines of the poems vary in length:
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders:
They tell me you are wicked and I believe them, for I have seen your
painted women under the gas lamps luring the farm boys.
Explanation: This is the answer from plato
Answer:
"Song" has the characteristics of a lyric poem. For example, there is only one speaker throughout the poem. The poem focuses on this speaker's inner thoughts and feelings about love. The speaker expresses his or her feelings in the following lines:
That dreams alone can truly be,
For 'tis in dream I come to thee.
Explanation:
if tis is for edmentum then yes this is A answer