Betty Botter
bought some butter.
"But," she said,
"the butter's bitter.
If I put it
in my batter,
it will make
my batter bitter.
But a bit
of better butter--
that would make
my batter better."
So she bought
a bit of butter,
better than
her bitter butter.
And she put it
in her batter,
and the batter
was not bitter.
So 'twas better
Betty Botter
bought a bit
of better butter!
It is a poem about a family who has to learn to live with racism and not get bitter.
Guys suck. They are unfaithful and always cheat on you. P.S. I'm not bitter, it is seriously the meaning! By the way, it's a song lyric from his play Much Ado About Nothing, not a poem.
If you are asking about David Diops poem it might have to do with the hopes of development in Africa and a previous belief that they would emerge as a more powerful country. Diop grew up in Europe and was able to learn both ways of life. Hope that helps a little. You might look him up for more info.
"The day to cheer and night's dank dew to dry"- Act 2, Scene 3, line 6
a poem about a poem.
In "Song of the Chattahoochee" by Sidney Lanier, alliterations such as "Chattahoochee," "cliffs," and "changeless channel" are used to create poetic imagery and rhythm in the poem. These alliterations contribute to the overall musicality and flow of the poem.
Beautiful Betty bounced blissfully. Bold Betty baked blueberry bread. Bashful Betty bought bright balloons.
It is a poem about a family who has to learn to live with racism and not get bitter.
rofl. Its a tongue twister
It's possible, but I don't know anyone who can I can It is actually: betty botter bought some butter but she said the butters bitter if i put it in my batter it would make my batter bitter so she bought some better butter and the batter was not bitter so t'was betty botter bought a bit of better butter (which is harder)
The poem "Betty Botter" was written by Carolyn Wells. It is a tongue-twister poem revolving around the character Betty Botter who bought a bit of butter.
alliterations
Isabel Isabel, didn't worry, Isabel didn't scream or scurry.
Betty bought butter but the butter was bitter so Betty bought better butter to make the bitter butter better. Six sly snakes slid up the slide while one sly snake slid down.
Alliteration in a poem helps create musicality and rhythm by repeating the same initial consonant sound in neighbouring words. It can add emphasis to certain words or phrases, making them stand out to the reader or listener. Overall, alliteration can enhance the overall aesthetic appeal of the poem and contribute to its flow and tone.
This is an example of monumentally used in an alliteration sentence: Betty bought a bit of butter by that bit of butter was bitter so Betty bought a bit of monumentally butter.
"Psychosocial" and "Wait and Bleed" by Slipknot are examples of songs that contain alliterations.