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1 vote
Perched over her eyes: lovely Frida, erect

among parrots, in the stern petticoats of the peasant,
who painted herself a present—
wildflowers entwining the plaster corset
her spine resides in, that flaming pillar—
this priestess in the romance of mirrors.

Each night she lay down in pain and rose
to the celluloid butterflies of her Beloved Dead,
Lenin and Marx and Stalin arrayed at the footstead.
And rose to her easel, the hundred dogs panting
like children along the graveled walks of the garden, Diego’s
love a skull in the circular window
of the thumbprint searing her immutable brow.

How does this poem resemble an Elizabethan sonnet?

It contains exactly 14 lines.
It has no set rhyme pattern.
It has a pattern of repeating lines.
It has a set number of syllables per line.

2 Answers

0 votes

It contains exactly 14 lines. i just took the test

User Mosselman
by
5.2k points
3 votes

Answer:

It contains exactly 14 lines

Step-by-step explanation:

The only resemblance that the poem above has to an Elizabethan sonnet is the fact that it has 14 lines, as well as the Elizabethan sonnets, since they are written in iambic pentameter, but the Elizabethan sonnets have strict rhyming patterns and have a set number of syllables per line, but in this case the poem does not have a certain number of syllables per line.

User Agam
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4.5k points