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How Does Frost Use Figurative Language In Birches

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How Does Frost Use Figurative Language In Birches
In the poem Birches, by Robert Frost, he uses figurative language throughout his poem. The use of figurative language like personification, metaphor, and simile makes the reader have a more vivid experience while reading the poem.
In the poem Birches, the writer uses personification in the next sentence “they click upon themselves as the breeze rises” (line 7 and 8). Mr. Frost explains that when there is a strong breeze the birches click with each other and it moves them up and down and eventually for a moment they touch each other as if they were once one single birch. Personification is also used in lines 15 and 16 where he states “Tough once they are bowed so low for long, they never right themselves” (lines 15 and 16). The writer talks
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Mr. Frost compares the leaves of the birches to girls’ hair and how when winter comes is if they were drying, since the leaves get dry with the cold, it gives the reader a vivid interpretation of the frozen, crunchy leaves that the winter brings. In line 44 he also uses a simile by stating, “And life is too much like a pathless wood” (line 44). Mr. Frost is comparing the journey of life to a path that has never been traveled before, just like life, you go through life lost, creating a path just for yourself along you go to the unexplored. He also writes a metaphor in lines 54-57 and they states “...And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more, but dipped it’s to and set me down again” (lines 57-57). In these lines he is trying to compare himself to the snow. He is trying to make an image in the reader’s head of the branches arching because of his weight, when in reality the snow’s weight who arches them.
The use of similes, personification. Metaphor and snapshots are very well incorporated to the poem Birches, the use of figurative language in the poem make up pictures of the winter time with the vivid language that the writer, Robert Frost,

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