I’m not very good at poetry! but this is something I wrote about the Holocaust in my Jr year of high school. I’m sure you can use this as the Holocaust was a huge example of dehumanization.
In Another lifetime
By Kiara Ramirez
I Walked besides you like everyone else.
I promise what your people claimed me for wasn’t dealt.
I was the opposite of what you all had felt.
The millions that once walked, now vanished and lost.
All at what cost?
From the moment we arrived,
We saw the grey in the sky.
From the moment we got air,
The scent left anyone in despair.
Yes, they even took chunks of our hair.
Little did we know,
And little did we see.
Those moments in the entrance
We’re the last most of us got to see.
To the people who got away.
To the people who hid another day.
To the people who never woke up or had died in that way.
And to the children who just wanted to play.
You will be remembered every second of every day.
I hoped I helped much loveee :)
Answer:
The use of repetition in the second stanza relates to language because it mirrors the kind of repetitive monotony that has characterized the poets life. for EX. It linguistically creates excitement to suggest that the couple is happy. It doesn't suggest anything apart from what it describes.
Explanation:
PLEASE MARK BRAINLIEST, ONLY NEED 1 MORE!!
In Malory's <span>Morted'Arthur, </span><span>Arthur is warned by Sir Gawain not to lead his army against Mordred the next day. If Arthur fights Mordred tomorrow, he and many men on both sides will die. Gawain tells Arthur to postpone the battle for a month to give Lancelot time to arrive. </span>