The quote in the question above is the BASIC PLOT of "I'm Nobody! Who are you<span>?", a short lyric poem by Emily Dickinson.
</span>Further analyzing the poem, we can observe that the narrator's POV is first person, and the message that the poem passes across is that being a nobody isn't as bad as people think it is. Also, the poem seeks to establish that public people lose privacy so being public may not be as great as people think it is. Overall, the <span>style used is iambic tetrameter and trimeter.</span>
A limerick is a piece that follows the AABBA format. That means that lines one and two rhyme with each other, three and four rhyme with each other, and line five rhymes with the first two. So, an example of a limerick about the ocean would be,
“There’s nothing that’s quite like the sea
With blue water deep as can be
All the shells on the sand
In the sun getting tanned
Nothing else could be better to me”
because sea, be, and me rhyme, and so do sand and tanned.
Answer:
Periodically, we sort those questions into lists to make finding what you need easier, like these previous lists of prompts for personal or narrative writing and for argumentative writing, or like this monster list of more than 1,000 prompts, all categorized by subject.
This time, however, we’re making a list to help your students more easily connect the literature they’re reading to the world around them — and to help teachers find great works of nonfiction that can echo common literary themes.
Explanation:
I’m assuming you’re talking about The Raven by Edgar Allen Poe.
Possible themes entail:
-the discussion of death and the afterlife
-the memories of those who have passed
-ancient references to the Bible
-dealing with grief
-hopelessness