Essay sample library > A World Without Poetry - Poem by David Vincent

A World Without Poetry - Poem by David Vincent

2023-02-19 00:23:18

A place where a small scorpion rhymes, the rest of the time is trapped in a dark drip tank,

Imagine a world where the head of the great poet is expensive and adorns the walls of the running mall's hall.

It is difficult to imagine a world without movies, drama, novels, music, but you do not need to imagine a world without poetry. What I care about is that the people I know have not discovered the poetry for decades. And I spent countless hours reading modern poets like Lowell and Berrymann. Poet Like most of my classmates, I do not like poetry units in English classes at high school. Every year there will be laws as strict as sports coaching gymnastics. Just as I am an excellent athlete who dislikes parallel bars, I am an avid reader and he despises rhyming and rhythmic writing. Through tangled symbols and hints, I want to know why my poet can not just tell me what they mean.

In the world, poetry was originally a kind of oral art. Only elite can read and write, poetry is the art form of people. People, poets, others recite poems and recite. People who recite or listen to poetry have experienced the joy of poetry. That is the story, its rhythm, its rhythm, and its image. No one feels forgotten. But again and again, poetry counterattack. For example, in the 1990s, poetry Grand Slam was a powerful phenomenon that brought poetry power to people who did not have (or did not want) a public or college degree. The new two poems created happiness. In the United States of the 21st century, writers and audiences are opposed to political and social oppression, poetry has emerged again as a political force.

Mr. Thomas Hardy once mentioned that there are two highlights in the United States: a skyscraper and poetry of Edna St. Vincent Mirai. Edna Saint Vincent ยท Milay (1892 - 1950) is an American poet and playwright known for her lyric poetry (a poem expressing personal emotions and emotions) and her rich and emotional sonnets. Love is the theme. Millay was born and raised in Maine Rockland with a nurse Cora Buzzelle Millay and a teacher Henry Tollman Millay. Her middle name comes from the former Saint Vincent Hospital in New York where my beloved uncle's life will be saved. Young Edna called himself "Vincent" and was independent and frank - when she was a child she began to publish verses to the magazine. In 1917, she graduated from Vassar College, and published her first collection of poetry, resurrection and other verses.