Poetry has a long history in both Western and Oriental literature. As an art form, people think that even they can be updated before the written text ("poetry", nd). Western literature is intended to describe emotions, whereas in Japan it means incorporating instantaneous emotions, we believe that the role of the Orient, especially Japanese, is different from the role of Western poetry There are people. Nevertheless, poetry has been widespread in a new Japanese society since long ago. Poems are the most important in the earliest sentences.
Historically, poetry played an important role in American school curriculum. Early American textbooks such as "Introduction to New England" and McKinsey readers taught children to read the combination of poetry and prose. Thus, poetry is used to teach moral discipline, patriotism and nationalism, as well as geography and mathematics. Especially among immigrants - In the classrooms of the 19th century and the early 20th century, in the "poetry of the classroom", promote citizenship, create a sense of community and identity sharing, and support the development of American language acquisition In order to do, there is memory and performance. Because they were originally "learning with heart", these poems are usually prosody, the language used is easy to understand, easy to remember, and repeated.
The easiest way to define a prose is to say that it is a poetry without a dashed line. Because many prose looks like short paragraphs, some writers believe prose is basically the same shape as thunder novel (I am blogging here). I do not think the two formats are exactly the same, but I admit that it may be difficult to judge the difference. This format is believed to have originated in the 19th century French poet Aloysius repair (in at least the Western tradition) Bloomsbury Portland and Charles Baudelaire. Two famous poems of publicity are Gertrude Stein's "Gentle Button" (1914) and Francis Pongji's "The Voice of Things" (1942). Both authors concentrate on small items every day, including oranges, snails and tobacco, using this format. Perhaps the compactness of the form fits a narrow focus - this form will surely attract some authors humbly