breaks rules purposefully (Emily Dickinson) It “breaks the rules― of Grammar A, but don’t think for a second that Grammar B doesn’t have rules of its own, however more flexible they may be. Grammar B is much more descriptive, open to change. It’s the Mother of Exiles saying, “give me your tired, your poor,― rejected from Grammar A. Annotated from the Genius app. Note: the app crashed when I first created the annotation and hit save. from Grammar B on Genius Integrate the suggestion into the annotation, keeping the contributor guidelines in mind. Correct this Line Record a Video Annotation Edit Video Id Add an Image Formatting Help Save (shift+enter) cancel Add an image, video, or tweet by pasting in the URL: http://genius.com/logo.png Add a link like this: [Check out my fave website](http://genius.com) Simple formatting: *Italicize Album Titles* > This is how you quote from other sources How to write for Genius