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deeper allure. as you read, take notes on frost’s use of imagery and th…

Question

deeper allure.
as you read, take notes on frost’s use of imagery and the structure of this
poem.
1 whose woods these are i think i know.
his house is in the village though;
he will not see me stopping here
to watch his woods fill up with snow.
5 my little horse must think it queer
to stop without a farmhouse near
between the woods and frozen lake
the darkest evening of the year.
he gives his harness bells a shake
10 to ask if there is some mistake.
snow by lorenzoclick is licensed
under cc by - nc 2.0.
guiding questions
question 2 of 3
why does the horse shake the harness bells?
a it is nervous that it will never find the village.
b it is scared and afraid of the dark.
c it is excited to be out in the woods on a snowy
day.
d it does not understand why they have stopped.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

In Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, the horse is accustomed to routine stops (like at farmhouses). Stopping in a remote, uninhabited spot between woods and a frozen lake confuses it, so it shakes its harness bells to signal confusion about the unexpected stop.

Answer:

D. It does not understand why they have stopped.