Respuesta :
Poetry differs from all other forms of writing because it relies heavily on figurative language. Poetry can be interpreted as a visual art such as writing a poem shaped like a cat about a cat or audial art much like music due to rhyme schemes and sound devices. Wording used in plays and nonfiction are often straight-forward. One genre of poetry will most likely relate more closely to another genre rather than outside literature as new genres often combine parts of others or at the very least include influence from others.
Answer:
Poetry is special because it presents a language that is distinctly opposed to the regular, everyday, conversational language whose only purpose is communication. Even when it is modern, free-verse poetry, it is detached from the "common" use of language because it is always highly deliberate, measured according to its inner structure, determined by the rules (or even by the lack thereof). In a speech, fiction, nonfiction in print, or play, language has a certain function - to convey a message, to achieve a purpose, to engage a reader to do something, to inform. Poetry can have any of these functions, and much more, as it always creates a separate world where every letter, word, line, stanza, or any other form has an internal artistic role within the whole.
Explanation:
.