The River

By Valerie Bloom

The River’s a wanderer,
A nomad, a tramp,
He never chooses one place
To set up his camp.
The River’s a winder,
Through valley and hill
He twists and he turns,
He just cannot be still.
The River’s a hoarder
And he buries down deep
Those little treasures
That he wants to keep.
The River’s a baby,
He gurgles and hums,
And sounds like he’s happily
Sucking his thumbs.
The River’s a singer,
As he dances along,
The countryside echoes
The notes of his song.
The River’s a monster,
Hungry and vexed,
He’s goggled up trees
And he’ll swallow you next.

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River

1 / 15

How does the river act as a ‘singer’?

2 / 15

What type of sound does the river make as a ‘baby’?

3 / 15

What type of sentence is the line “The River’s a monster, hungry and vexed”?

4 / 15

What literary device is used in ‘The River’s a wanderer’?

5 / 15

What does ‘He just cannot be still’ suggest about the river?

6 / 15

What is the tone of the poem in the final stanza?

7 / 15

What does the river symbolize as a ‘monster’?

8 / 15

What is the river described as in the second stanza?

9 / 15

What is the central theme of the poem?

10 / 15

What does the river do as a ‘hoarder’?

11 / 15

What is the river compared to in the first stanza?

12 / 15

What do the different personas of the river symbolize?

13 / 15

What does the line ‘The countryside echoes the notes of his song’ mean?

14 / 15

What does the river do as a ‘wanderer’?

15 / 15

What does the river do as a ‘monster’?

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