English, asked by omlietanaph, 9 months ago

What's the rhyme scheme and figurative language in the poem "Woodman, Spare that Tree" by George Pope Morris? Thanks, its worth it

Answers

Answered by lathakanna2013
6

Answer:

rhyme scheme

all the four stanzas follow the same rhyme.

ababcdcd

Explanation:

all the four stanzas follow the same rhyme.

figurative language - alliteration - forgive this foolish; old oak; storm still

Imagery - bough, forefather's hand

Answered by hyacinth98
1

Every one of the four stanzas of the poem follows a similar rhyme scheme which is ababcdcd. The figurative speech used is alliteration.

Woodman, Spare that Tree

  • Simile, Metaphor, Symbolism, Alliteration, Hyperbole, and other allegorical language techniques are regularly utilized in verse.
  • Metaphorical language sonnets incorporate an abundance of non-literal language.
  • However figurative language might be tracked down in many types of composing, most likely none more so than in verse.

rhyme scheme

every one of the four stanzas of the poem follows a similar rhyme scheme which is ababcdcd

alliteration language - similar sounding word usage such as-

forgive this foolish; old oak; storm still

(#SPJ3)

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