The structure of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Bells" is nowhere near a cinquain or Shakespearean sonnet, since those poetic forms have 5 and 14 lines respectively, while "The Bells" is much longer. The fact that it does not follow a strict verse form makes one think of free verse, but the correct answer is B. "The Bells" is a lyric poem, made up of stanzas and using constant rhyme, which one does not find very often in free verse. Not for nothing was it adapted musically by Sergei Rachmaninoff.
An individual can make a big difference in the lives of others.
Hard work pays off in the end.
It is false that basic acronyms, acronymic sentences, and acronymic abbreviations cannot be nonsensical. They aim is to be cryptic, but also to reveal something sensical, a word or phrase that has a meaning.