English, asked by shloksharma81, 1 year ago

plz explain figures of speech in lake isle of innisfree

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Answered by Anonymous
12

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» William Butler Yeats's poem "\boxed{\red{The\:Lake\:Isle\:of\:Innisfree!}} " uses many figures of speech, including imagery, repetition, inference, personification, and onomatopoeia.

» Together, these evoke the peaceful, eternal, and deeply personal feelings that arise from contemplating nature.

» You might be interested to know that the poem is written in four-line stanzas, which follow the rhyme scheme of ABAB.

» This means that the last word of the first line and the last word of the third line, rhyme ("Innisfree" and "honeybee"). The second and the four lines also rhyme, but with a different sound ("made" and "glade").

Answered by Anonymous
5

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¥øʊя ∀η﹩ẘεя:-

William Butler Yeats's poem "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" uses many figures of speech, including imagery, repetition, inference, personification, and onomatopoeia. Together, these evoke the peaceful, eternal, and deeply personal feelings that arise from contemplating nature.

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