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How to read a poemA poem may be read for meaning, mood, entertainment, or appreciation of the author's technical skill.Poems may be read silently to oneself, or may be read aloud solo or to other people. Although reading aloud to oneself may raise eyebrows in many circles, this restriction is waived in the case of poetry. Some poems lend themselves most readily to appreciation through reading aloud, such as "Paul Revere's Ride" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. This poem tells a stirring patriotic myth of American opposition to British military and political domination. The engaging tale and regular poetic meter, as well as relative lack of subtler content or form, mean that its virtues are most apparent when the work is spoken or read. Poems can have many forms. Some are highly defined, with required line counts and rhyming patterns, such as the sonnet or limerick. Poems can have less structure or indeed almost no apparent structure at all, perhaps little of that normally apparent in ordinary prose language, such as grammar. Alexander Pope gives a well-known example of how in the best poetry, "The sound should be an echo to the sense..." English language poetic meter depends on vocal stress, rather than the number of syllables. It thus stands in contrast to poetry in other languages, such as French, where syllabic stress isn't present or recognized and syllable count is paramount. the extreme elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae.
only a few inches high. In walking across these thick
of shade, produced by the drooping of their sensitive petioles.
these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an adequate
devotion, which fill and elevate the mind.
April 19th.--Leaving Socego, during the two first days,
road generally ran across a glaring hot sandy plain, not
its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle chirping noise
and passed through the gay little village of Madre de Deos.
was in so bad a state that no wheeled vehicle, excepting the
we did not cross a single bridge built of stone; and
repair, that it was necessary to go on one side to avoid them.
marked by crosses, in the place of milestones, to signify
23rd we arrived at Rio, having finished our pleasant little
cottage at Botofogo Bay. It was impossible to wish for
in so magnificent a country. In England any person fond
always having something to attract his attention; but in
so numerous, that he is scarcely able to walk at all.
The few observations which I was enabled to make were
existence of a division of the genus Planaria, which inhabits
simple a structure.html">structure, that Cuvier has arranged them with the
other animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh
drier parts of the forest, beneath logs of rotten wood, on
little slugs, but are very much narrower in proportion, and
longitudinal stripes. Their structure is very simple: near the
transverse slits, from the anterior one of which a funnel-
some time after the rest of the animal was completely dead
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