Who is he and me in the quoted line stopping by woods
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Explanation:
Like much of Frost's work, it's a poem about the contemplation of nature and man's relationship to nature. The poem describes a man making his way home on a snowy evening to stop and watch a neighbor's woods fill up with snow, despite the cold and the late hours.
The poem begins with the speaker thinking about who owns the property he is passing through—“Whose woods these are I think I know”—yet it's clear that there's no one there to actually stop the speaker from trespassing. The owner's “house is in the village,” meaning “he will not see” the speaker.
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