Asked by j
We strode down the open corridors together in our solitary fancy tasting artichokes, possessing every frozen delicacy, and never passing the cashier.
Ginsberg most likely uses long-line free verse here to
draw attention to the poem’s patterns of rhyme and meter.
express his thoughts freely and without constraints.
keep the content of the poem simple and easy to imagine.
show his desire to return to an unassuming existence.
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express his thoughts freely and without constraints.
Ginsberg’s long-line free verse (as in Howl and other poems) creates a breath-based, stream-of-consciousness flow—allowing rapid associative imagery and emotional intensity rather than fixed rhyme or meter.
Ginsberg’s long-line free verse (as in Howl and other poems) creates a breath-based, stream-of-consciousness flow—allowing rapid associative imagery and emotional intensity rather than fixed rhyme or meter.
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