1. The problem asks to identify the structure of the poem "I Dwell in Possibility" by Emily Dickinson.
2. Let's review the common poem structures:
- Free verse: No consistent meter or rhyme scheme.
- Haiku: 3 lines with syllable pattern 5-7-5.
- Sonnet: 14 lines with specific rhyme scheme and meter.
- Limerick: 5 lines with an AABBA rhyme scheme.
3. "I Dwell in Possibility" has 12 lines divided into 3 quatrains (4-line stanzas).
4. The poem has a rhyme scheme and meter consistent with a lyrical poem but does not fit haiku or limerick patterns.
5. It is not a sonnet because it does not have 14 lines.
6. It is not free verse because it has a rhyme scheme and meter.
7. Therefore, the poem is best classified as a lyrical poem with a structured rhyme scheme, but since the options are limited, the closest correct answer is that it is not free verse, haiku, sonnet, or limerick.
8. Since none of the options perfectly fit, the best choice is "sonnet" is incorrect, "haiku" and "limerick" are incorrect, and "free verse" is incorrect because of rhyme and meter.
9. However, Emily Dickinson's poems often follow common meter and rhyme, so the poem is structured but not a sonnet.
10. Given the options, the poem is not any of the listed forms; the closest is that it is not free verse.
Final answer: The poem "I Dwell in Possibility" is not free verse, haiku, sonnet, or limerick. It is a lyrical poem with quatrains and rhyme.
Poem Structure B8Faed
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