STD IX - English (II)

Name
Class
ITS ID
I chatter, chatter, as I flow..To join the brimming river...For men may come and men may go...But I go on for ever
The figure of speech used in this poem
Similie
Personification
The poet's use of 'chatter' for the brook's flow
Signifies its crackling sound
Reveals its fighting nature
Explains its life
Adds a quality to it
The brook flows but loses its identity in
Joining the sea
Joining the river
Mixing with the river
Flowing down the hills
And out again I curve and flow... To join the brimming river...For men may may come and men may go...But I go on forever.
For what does the brook curve now?
To enter the shady areas
To linger by the shingly bars
To join the brimming river
To make a dash over the hills
The last two lines here stress the brook's
Transitoriness
Immortality
Future
Permanence
The nature of brook's existence is clear in the words
Men may come and men may go
But I go on forever
To join the brimming river
I loiter round my cresses
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood...And sorry I could not travel both...And be one traveller,long I stood...And looked down one as far as I could...To where it bent in the undergrowth.
Which poem is this stanza taken from
He sees before him
A yellow forest and roads
A dense forest
Two roads diverging in a forest
The poet is standing
At a crossing
At a crossing in autumn season
Where two roads cross
In a forest
His desire at this moment is to
Cross the roads
Travel further
Travel on both the roads
See the forest
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