![]() ![]() The poet is lost in the charming beauty of woods. He knows that the woods belong to a person whose house is in the village. As he sits in his horse-driven carriage looking at beautiful woods, he is tempted to stay there permanently. The lyric is simple anecdote relating how the poet pauses one evening to watch the snowfall in the woods. Except for the sound of the snowflake and wind when there is no other song the speaker wants to stay there longer but he remembers that he must leave him to fulfil his promises. The horse seems to be reminding the master that it is a mistake to stop there. The horse shakes its hardness bells impatiently. His sleigh horse does not understand why the master has stopped there. There is no one nearby so so he can enjoy that beautiful scene. He thinks at first that the owner will be annoyed with the speaker’s presence there but then he remembers that the owner of the woods lives in the village. He wonders about the owner of those woods. ![]() He is watching on the snow falling in the woods. This poem reflects many of Frost’s most distinctive qualities, including attention to natural scenery, the relationship between humans and nature, and the powerful theme implied by individual lines. Introduction: “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by a well-known poet Robert Frost was published in his New Hampshire collection in 1923. ![]() “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost ![]()
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