In “Mending Wall” (222) he uses alliteration. The definition of alliteration is the repetition of initial sounds. An example would be “old-stone savage”. A different word sound would be the use of consonance in his poem “Mowing” (625). This is when there is repetition in the consonant sound at the end of the syllables. An example from the poem is when he says “sound beside the woods”. All of the d’s is what make it fit under this category. In his poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” (214) there is assonance, alliteration, and rhyme. Since we have already discussed alliteration in one of his others poems we will focus on the rhyme of this poem. Even though I said that Frost did not always follow the rules of poetry he did for this poem because he used the aaba pattern. He put a lot of thought and creativity into this poem. Like I said at the beginning, Frost uses a lot of figurative language to make his poems more vivid to his
In “Mending Wall” (222) he uses alliteration. The definition of alliteration is the repetition of initial sounds. An example would be “old-stone savage”. A different word sound would be the use of consonance in his poem “Mowing” (625). This is when there is repetition in the consonant sound at the end of the syllables. An example from the poem is when he says “sound beside the woods”. All of the d’s is what make it fit under this category. In his poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” (214) there is assonance, alliteration, and rhyme. Since we have already discussed alliteration in one of his others poems we will focus on the rhyme of this poem. Even though I said that Frost did not always follow the rules of poetry he did for this poem because he used the aaba pattern. He put a lot of thought and creativity into this poem. Like I said at the beginning, Frost uses a lot of figurative language to make his poems more vivid to his