34 POINTS AND BRAINEST ANSWER!!!!
TOPIC IS ANYTHING!

Write a 6 stanza poem, using imagery, personification, metaphor, simile, rhyme/rhythms, alliteration, symbol, consonance, vocabulary words (be careful with your word choices) and make your word choices powerful! Please do imagery, it's pretty important! And use the other figurative languages (if you like) but most importantly use the ones, I've wrote above! NO PLAGIARISM!!!!

Respuesta :

Sweet lady do I sure love you
You remind me of the setting sun
Your voice that of a singing birds
And your hair cascades like a waterfall

Sweet boy do I sure hate you
You remind me of a blazing meteor
Your voice that of a cacophonous parrot
And your hair that of a lions mane

Sweet lady do I sure adore you
Your food is as heavenly as the heavens themselves
Your craftsmanship so scrupulous and agile
Your writing that evokes emotions everytime

Sweet boy do I sure detest you
Your food as horrible as the pits of hell
Your craftsmanship so clumsy and peculiar
Your writing that leaves me confused and candid 

Sweet lady, do I sure despise you
You were a rose with too many thorns
A fallen angel that bore bitter hate towards all
Truly, you were a devil

Sweet boy, do I sure praise you
You were the dove in a murder
A rising angel that was nothing but sweet, scintillating, sincere
Truly, you were an angel

Aaaaa I tried; also, a murder is a group of crows so no he didn't kill anyone lol
Also, she says candid as a way to say she wants to be honest on how horrible it was. 

Hope this helps!  I listened to Take Me to Church by Hozier this time!


   The winter evening settles down


   With smell of steaks in passageways.


   Six o'clock.


   The burnt-out ends of smoky days.


   And now a gusty shower wraps


   The grimy scraps


   Of withered leaves about your feet


   And newspapers from vacant lots;


   The showers beat


   On broken blinds and chimney-pots,


   And at the corner of the street


   A lonely cab-horse steams and stamps.


   And then the lighting of the lamps.


Eliot also used imagery in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock:


   Let us go then, you and I,


   When the evening is spread out against the sky


   Like a patient etherised upon a table;


   Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets,


   The muttering retreats


   Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels


   And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells