&glosstext=<b>IMAGE:</b><br><br>When you read a poem you see pictures in your mind, but unlike photographs or paintings, these images are made from words and are sometimes called word-pictures or descriptions. Here is an example from Wendy Copes Tich Miller:<br><br>		Tich Miller wore glasses<br>		with elastoplast pink frames<br>		and had one foot three sizes larger than the other.<br><br>We also see images when a poet uses metaphors and similes such as those found in W. B. Yeats' 'When You Are Old':<br><br>		And bending down beside the glowing bars,<br>		Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled<br>		And paced upon the mountains overhead<br>		And hid his face amid a crowd of stars.<br><br>A good way to remember a poem is to write down, or even draw, the images that come to your mind as you read it.