A Beautiful Crooked Line
A poet is unsuccessful when they’re trying to be something that they’re not.
Image by: David Hayward
Roses are red, violets are blue, Robert Frost reached his goal, and his poetry has a nice tune. All poems need to be different but not different with their words or sounds, they have to be different with their meaning. A poem with deeper meaning to the reader rather than a deeper meaning to the writer is a true art. Poems have to be different, also they do not have to be wild. Poems are tunes that create their names as the words of the story carry you along a wild yet calm adventure. Every single poem has a beginning, a middle, and an end. In what order that poem is in, that is up to the writer, but every poem has that standard. Having a different order in the standard is what creates a different mood. The reader may perceive a completely different mood in the beginning than in the end of the poem. Regardless of the mood, a poem still holds the same purpose. It is to entertain the audience, to bring up a memory that the audience has once forgotten about. Individuals will try to be a Walt Whitman, a Edgar Allan Poe, or an Emily Dickinson, yet they never truly allow the name to be created by themselves through the story. It is best for someone to love a good crooked line’s straightness rather than adore a mechanically straight line. Musicians and poets both have a similar tune, even with their different techniques. Both incorporate a free handed solo that can uplift a sad heart or do the complete opposite. That is what creates such a full and effective tone in writing. Two different audiences with similar characteristics is what makes a successful prompt. Robert Frost accomplished his purpose that it should be the pleasure of a poem itself to tell how it can. With lacking credibility, it is his passion for both arts, poetry and music, that helped portray the ideas of his personified words in a corresponding way.
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