586, II. 1-4). The author uses the following pronouns in the first four opening lines of the poem; Me, his and him. The way he uses pronouns helps me understand who the author is referring to. Through her writing at the beginning of the poem I am led to understand that she is referring to a man with whom she may have a mutual relationship. The author admires the sight of snow falling and decorating a village from afar. The melody of this poem is brought to the reader in a couple of different ways. Commonly, I immediately noticed, the rhyming rhythm used by the author. “Stopping in the woods on a snowy evening”: “Whose woods are these I think I know / His house though is in the village / He won't see me stopping here / Watching his woods fill with snow” (p.586, II. 1-4). The author capitalizes the first word in each verse. While rhyming on the first two lines, not the third, the author connects the last line in rhythmic rhyme with his first two lines. This is not true for the rest
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