Answer:
Her name was Nadia TuenI and she was Lebanese.
Explanation:
She was a poet who wrote volumes in French. She got numerous rewards for her work like the Prix de l'Académie Française, the Order of La Pléiade, and the Prix Said Akl. She wrote about woman in politics in a place like Lebanon. She battled cancer for 18 years but eventually died from it at age 47.
To help, I wrote an example of the poem prompt you gave(Images -- should read from left to right) In the example, I used irony to show contrast and contradictory from the speaker's tone and veiw at the begining of the poem compared to at the end of the poem. I tried to incorporate a story into the poem because I figured out a good way to tell a--what is a rather mediocre--story with the given prompt. I incorporated this story into the poem simply by sticking to an ABB rhyme scheme throughout the entire thing. There are of course an endless number of ways one could write a poem, for poetry is often seen as more of a creative, expressive form of writing rather than a technical one. If you have an idea and you can manage to formulate it in stanzas, there's not much that can go wrong.
Answer:
Explanation:
You do want to paraphrase information. You want to make sure that you know essentially who said what.
You want to include the facts that relate to the topic. This is more to remind yourself what the facts are.
The quotations are always a good idea. You are making sure that your reader knows that you are not alone in what you think or if it is a quotation that requires a negative response, that is also good.
These are the three that you should check.
Emily Dickinson is world renown among poets and those who love literature for her emphasis on both thought and feeling.
She is considered a master of form and syntax and is often called 'a poet of paradox'.
Generally speaking her poems tend to be short and they usually use only one voice (which is not necessarily that of the poet). She published well over 1800 poems of which only a handful of them were titled as is the case of the poem listed here.
Notice her use of form and paradox in referring to hope as a thing with feathers, something that never asks for anything in return.