It really depends on which poem you are referring to. If it's by Langston Hughes, then I'd say it's free verse.
Free verse means there are no rules here - the poet is not using any strict meter (pentameter, or such), and there are usually no rhymes. Since this is the case, ballad, lyric, and blank verse cannot be correct because they all have a strict poetic form to follow.
Answer:
"Quote" (Daniels 15).
Explanation:
In-text citations are inserted in the body of your paper to shortly emphasize the source of your information. You need to write the surname of an author (as we have two authors, we write the first one), and the page of the book you've taken the quote from. You write it in the parentheses, and without a comma -->> <u>"Quote" (Daniels 15).</u>
But you need to provide more detailed information in the works-cited list. In our case it will look like this -->> Daniels, G., Greene, <em>M. Twain’s Boyhood and His Fiction</em>, edited by Laura Masters. Scribner, 2005, p. 15.
I hope it helped you :)
A play usually ends with a marriage as a happy ending.
Answer:
he fought the urge to do what everyone said to