Answer:
From the opening sentence, we understand that there are thirteen bubbles that floated in the milk.
The author described the bubbles as "transparent hemispheres gleamed like souvenirs of the summer days just past, rich with blue reflections of the sky and of shadowy greens".
The effect of the author's choice of words was that of imagery as it helped the readers to "see" the bubbles in their mind's eye with such clarity as it was so succinctly described.
The author further described John's actions as he used the spoon to scoop the milk and swallow it in such a way that suggested he was either very hungry or in a hurry.
"John Hawkins jabbed the bubble closest to him with his spoon,. . .there was no mark of where it had been"
This description had the effect of making the readers know how eager John was to consume the milk and how quickly the ripples vanished.
The readers can also infer that John consumed the milk in an aggressive manner because of the way he jabbed at the ripple closest to him in his effort to drink the milk.
a poem that does not have a set rhyme scheme or set meter
A free verse poem is just that, a poem that is free. It is free of all rules or constraints. It does not have a set rhyme scheme or set meter. Rhyme scheme is the pattern in which rhymes line. For example, Shakespeare's sonnets have a particular rhyme scheme labeled ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. Meter is the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem that creates a rhythm.
Blank verse is a poem that has a specific meter but no rhyme scheme.
Shakespeare is the answer