First of all, how are you defining "absolute truth"?
Second of all, it's impossible to have any proof about the existence/non-existence of God, since it boils down to faith.
I think if you only have 40 minutes, you shouldn't do it now. Especially if you are going to post all 30 questions as individual questions on here. I think tomorrow (or whenever you have a lot of time) you should spend some time to study and then do the review quiz.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
You may want to count the number of syllables in each line, unless my source of the syllable pattern is wrong and your poem somehow does have a syllable pattern.
Each stanza should be 5/7/5/7/7?
"with our million pound back packs" has eight syllables.
It's funny how you set the minimum at 26 lines, because one of my favorite poems is in fact 26 lines long. Edward Gorey's "The Gashleycrumb Tinies" takes the reader on an alphabetic adventure with 26 children who experience untimely death in rhyming couplets.
PS: It would be very easy to...