Answer:
"No free man should be seized or detained, or stripped of his rights or belonging, or outlawed or banished, or denied of his standing in any other way, nor will we continue with constrain against him, or send others to do so, but by the lawful judgment of his rises to or by the law of the land. ... To no one will we offer, to no one deny or delay right or equity."
Explanation:
The given text is taken from Magna Carta, Clause 39. The Magna Carta was signed by King John in 1215. This document is a prominent symbol of justice, fairness, and human rights.
Clause 39 of the Carta ensures fair judgment, trial, and imprisonment, and as per the law. Before this under the corruption of King John, many unfair imprisonment and sentencing have been done, so to eliminate unlawful practices by the monarchy, this document was enacted into the law.
The correct paraphrasing of the text has been provided above.
I assume you'd like an original poem, using those four words. Please be aware that using a poem someone puts on here, for your homework, would technically be plagiarizing.
Now that that's out of the way, the easiest way to write a poem with waist, waste, manner, and manor in it would be to put those four words at the end of the lines, because they rhyme. I don't have a whole lot of other tips for you, other than when you write it, try reading it out loud. If it doesn't flow nicely when you say it, it's not going to be a very good poem to read.
A really easy type of poem you could write would be a limerick. A limerick works in AABBA form, meaning the first two lines rhyme with each other, the third and fourth lines rhyme, and the last line rhymes with the first two. The first two lines, along with the last, are usually longer than the third and fourth.
I'll write an example using your words.
She thought it a true, tragic waste,
To have such a small, wasp-like waist.
So she ate in a manner
That cleaned out the manor,
And fattened up quite post-haste.
You could write in another style, if you'd like, such as free form (which doesn't have to rhyme, it just has to flow), or haiku (three lines, the first and last have five syllables, the middle has seven), but a limerick is probably the easiest by far. Whatever works best for you, go for it.
Here are examples of the other two poetry styles I just mentioned.
Free form:
They laid to waste the manor,
with fire and oil
tied her waist to the stake,
in rough manner
burning it all
to rid themselves
of such a terrible witch.
Haiku:
Its waist was so small
Its manner was a true waste
Its manor, empty.
Happy writing!
Utterly hopeless, miserable, humiliating, or <span>wretched.
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