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7 September, 02:59

I'll give brainleast

Read this excerpt from Langston Hughes's "The Negro Speaks of Rivers": I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins. My soul has grown deep like the rivers. Which type of poem is this work?

A) a narrative poem

B) a concrete poem

C) a lyric poem

D) a free verse poem

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Answers (2)
  1. 7 September, 03:24
    0
    The answer is A: a narrative poem

    Explanation:

    The poem is narrative due to Langston Hughes using personal-tense words such as "I've" and "my" in the poem, and eluding the written intent towards other characters in a first person perspective
  2. 7 September, 05:31
    0
    The poem is D) a 'free verse' poem.

    Explanation:

    Langston Hughes wrote this poem in 1921 following no metrical scheme or rhyme pattern. So, lines in every stanza vary in the number of syllables and there are no rhyming pairs to be seen.

    The poem is characterized by repetition: the word 'rivers' and the names of world known rivers such as the Euphrates, the Congo, the Nile and the Mississipi can be read throughout the poem. There's also repetition of the phrases such as 'I've known'.

    There are also continues similes like 'my soul has grown deep like the river' and 'rivers as ancient as the world'.

    The different literary figures and the free verse genre allow the author to express the powerfulness and greatness of black history since older times.
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