The difference between free verse and black verse is free verse has no rhythm. Free verse flows naturally, I guess you can say. It doesn't rhyme. It's kinda like as song. Most songs don't rhyme unless it's rap. So, songs are categorized as free verse while rap is categorized as, well, a rhyme that rhymes.
Answer:
CONFIRMED:
OPTION D IS THE CORRECT ANS.
The Answer is: It is their only way out.
"Yes," replied the Professor, looking at me calmly from under his spectacles, "it is the only chance which remains to us of ever escaping from the interior of the earth to the light of day."
Assuming this is in regard to "I Hear America Singing" by Walt Whitman, and "I, Too", by Langston Hughes.
The main point that Hughes makes in "I too (Sing, America)" is that the experience of many marginalized groups are not acknowledged in the national narrative. He directs this at Whitman's poem, pointing the many groups he does not mention singing. Hughes makes the point that American needs to celebrate all its people, and not just the ones who had a voice at the time.
Best answer is D) <span>America needs to celebrate its people.
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Answer:
The correct answer is C: "a repeated grouping of two or more lines in a poem that often share a pattern of rhythm and rhyme."
Explanation:
A stanza is a division of a poem which consists of a series of lines arranged together, forming a unit. Stanzas usually have a fixed length, meter, or rhyming scheme.