Read the poem below and answer the question that follows.
“Horses on the Grass”
by Grace Schulman
From the tower window
the moon
draws a silver maple’s shadow
across a spangled lawn;
horses
rear, manes lashing the air,
front legs floating.
Half monarch,
half shadow, the tree
aspires to the sky;
one branch, cracked by lightning,
scrapes the earth.
Reflected
on the grass, bent twigs
are curved hooves, galloping
as the moon rises.
Divided it stands
in wholeness, mourning
its victories, praising
the god of trees, the king of horses.
The tree holds souls
in a bark prison
poised like a runner at the starting line—
and bolts free, wildly
pawing the ground those roots lie under.
Source: Schulman, Grace. “Horses on the Grass.” Days of Wonder: New and Selected Poems. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002. Poetry Foundation. Web. 25 July 2011.
Which statement about the poem is true?
The poem follows a rhyme scheme.
The poem is a sonnet.
The poem follows a fixed pattern of meter.
The poem uses free-verse structure.

Respuesta :

Hello, the correct answer is the final option - the poem uses free-verse structure. This poem doesn't follow a rhyme scheme, as there are various different rhymes, and it is not consistent. It is not a sonnet - a sonnet has 14 lines, and this poem has more. It also doesn't follow a fixed pattern of meter, because there are lines with two syllables, and there are those that have over 5, so again, it is not consistent. Thus we can conclude that the answer is "free-verse structure", as that means that it doesn't follow any of these rules.

The poem uses free-verse structure.