QUICK question! Need help!

<p>For one of my "about me" things, I wrote a poem.
This poem was for a school which can be abbreviated to five letters.
Each stanza of the poem has as many syllables as the corresponding letter in the name.
So basically the poem is about me, but spells out the uni name.</p>

<p>I tried so hard to make the reader realize the meter is important, but I don't know if I should risk leaving it up to whether or not they get it.
Should I add a comment at the end, in parentheses for example, telling the reader to check the syllables?
It's very short, so in all it still wouldn't even take as much time as reading a regular essay.
Please help, I need advice asap. And whether you answer or not, happy new years.</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

<p>That would always help. It’s a very creative idea.</p>

<p>When quoting a poem in MLA format, a slash is used to distinguish each line (there one was a man from peru/ who dreamed he was eating his shoe/…)</p>

<p>Maybe you could try that</p>

<p>I don’t think I would leave it to chance. If you get a very tired admissions reader they might miss it but I would be very clever & snappy in creating the obvious so not to insult the reader… More work for you unfortunately… Can you just bold out the letters that spell the Uni name?</p>