how does the poet describe the woods?
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The poet has used three adjectives to describe the woods. The woods were 'lovely, dark and deep'. It was the whole atmosphere comprising of the beauty of the woods on a snowy evening, the darkness, the depth or density of the woods and the silence of the place that might actually hold the poet spellbound.
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The poet that is Robert Frost describes the woods that he has ventured into as the most loveliest and darkest woods he has seen.
- The poet that is Robert Frost describes the woods that he has ventured into as the most loveliest woods he has seen. Since the day happened to be the darkest nights of that particular year, the forest appears to be dark and quite deep. His words are compared to the solitary pleasure that he is gaining out of the venture inside the woods. The pitch dark inside of a man has been compared to the density and darkness of the woods. The woods are so dark that it makes him compare that darkness with a man’s ignorant mindset.
- He later goes on to say how his horse is puzzled as well since it has never come to a place such as this.
Hence, the poet that is Robert Frost describes the woods that he has ventured into as the most loveliest and darkest woods he has seen.
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