Consider the third stanza of the poem:
Moving of the earth brings harms and fears,
Men reckon what it did and meant;
But trepidation of the spheres,
Though greater far, is innocent.
Which of the following best summarizes the point the narrator makes in this passage?
Things bound to the material world are of lesser power, but are more subject to harm and fear than things that exist outside it.
A stanza is a group of lines within a poem that is separated from other groups of lines by spacing. It functions like a paragraph in prose, helping to organize the structure and flow of the poem. Stanza breaks can indicate shifts in tone, topic, or form within the poem.
A number of lines grouped together, like a verse in a song.
The plural of stanza is stanzas. As in "stanzas are found in poems".
Normally, a stanza is a short section of a longer poem. However there are many poems that are comprised of a single stanza.
structure
There are many poems in circulation about friends that are at least three stanzas. The library has many books of these poems.
Her poems are all numbered, and often are refered to as the first few words of the poem. Here is a website that has a few of her poems.
no one can write it for you read poems and annotate!
They may separate poems into stanzas of varying line lengths
In poems, irregular stanzas are usually those with different amounts of lines in each stanza. Whereas, regular stanzas are those with the same amounts of lines in each stanza. this usually gives the poem a song-like quality.
LOVE COUNTS, from ROMANTIC POEMS, by Rick L. Williams It all adds up for you and me, The answer, quotient, multiplicity. Absolute value for love we give, Is always true, I'm positive. (first stanza - from 10-stanza poem) book available on amazon.com
Yes. Many contemporary poets write poems that have no stanza breaks. Many writers, like Poet Laureate Kay Ryan for example, write one stanza poems. Patience by Kay Ryan is one example of a one stanza poem. Read it here: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/20263
Some examples of 6 stanza poems are "The Tyger" by William Blake, "Annabel Lee" by Edgar Allan Poe, and "Ode to a Nightingale" by John Keats. These poems consist of six stanzas, each containing a specific number of lines and following a particular rhyme scheme or pattern.
what is a sentence for stanza well here's your answer:The third stanza of the poem gives us a clear picture of the poet's thinking.hope I helped you guys out!!♥