My guess would be each quatrain develops the problem of the poem and<span>the turn (volta<span>) comes at the beginning of the closing couplet.</span></span>
Answer:
um you have to expliane more what book
Explanation:
did you read
Answer:
Leaning left and limping light - Alliteration.
Silently, the night took flight - Internal Rhyme.
The story went on and on - Repetition.
So strange, the frail orange in the basket - Assonance.
For a simple walk, An elaborate talk - End rhyme.
We braved the cold, one and all and felt the chill in our very souls - Slant rhyme.
Explanation:
- <em>The first one is Alliteration as it displays the occurrence of the same letter repeatedly i.e. "P".</em>
- <em>The second one is Internal rhyme as its middle word "night" rhymes with the last word"flight". </em>
- <em>The third one is repetition as it indicates the repetition of the story.</em>
- <em>The fourth excerpt is Assonance as it observes a repetition of vowel sounds "Strange", "orange".</em>
- <em>The fifth presents the End rhyme as the end words "Walk" and "talk" rhyme with each other.</em>
- <em>The last one exemplifies the Slant rhyme as it shares the same consonant in "cold" and "chill" with a distinct sound. </em>
The climax of the story White Giraffe starts from the fact
when Martine starts heading towards the shipyard and meets Ben who is a
childhood friend from her school. They sat down and planned a way for Martine
to get into the ship along with all the animals. The name of the ship in which
they wanted to smuggle all the animals was Aurora. Martine gets the white
giraffe to her grandma’s house and from then on the story falls into place. So
the climax is the part that has been described as far as the story White
Giraffe is concerned.
The able-bodied men he saw begging for money and standing in bread lines in the streets of New York led Harburg to write the song, “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime "
Explanation:
The reason for the song "brother, can you spear a dime?" comes from the enormous numbers of skilful body citizens, the people who created the country and fought the war and are now in the search of bread.
The aim was not to speak out of the bitterness and misery of the human race, but to focus on the reason for both the forgotten and loss of these people, who were vital to their country.