English, asked by technical1178, 6 months ago

Write a poem

Theme:
Imagine a world where many things grow on trees and are distributed to all graciously.
How that world would be?

World Limit:
Write a poem on the same in about 6-12 lines

Creativity:
1)Anything unusual can be imagined to be growing on trees.
For Example: Clothes for poor, kind words, medicines, pens, pencils, peaceful sleep, etc.
2)What will be the conclusion of the above? Will it be good in the long run? Why or why not?
Express in poetic lines in various styles like; a tree speaking (personification), you narrating a story of a tree which used to distribute ABC thing, etc.

Answers

Answered by ramyadukuntla
1

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Aesop's Fables, or the Aesopica, is a collection of fables credited to Aesop, a slave and storyteller believed to have lived in ancient Greece between 620 and 564 BCE. Of diverse origins, the stories associated with his name have descended to modern times through a number of sources and continue to be reinterpreted in different verbal registers and in popular as well as artistic media.

A detail of the 13th-century Fontana Maggiore in Perugia, Italy, with the fables of The Wolf and the Crane and The Wolf and the Lamb

The fables originally belonged to the oral tradition and were not collected for some three centuries after Aesop's death. By that time a variety of other stories, jokes and proverbs were being ascribed to him, although some of that material was from sources earlier than him or came from beyond the Greek cultural sphere. The process of inclusion has continued until the present, with some of the fables unrecorded before the Late Middle Ages and others arriving from outside Europe. The process is continuous and new stories are still being added to the Aesop corpus, even when they are demonstrably more recent work and sometimes from known authors.

Manuscripts in Latin and Greek were important avenues of transmission, although poetical treatments in European vernaculars eventually formed another. On the arrival of printing, collections of Aesop's fables were among the earliest books in a variety of languages. Through the means of later collections, and translations or adaptations of them, Aesop's reputation as a fabulist was transmitted throughout the world

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