Answer:
Explanation:Treasure Island is supposed to be a novel for boys. This is coming out of stodgy, Victorian England, so girls aren't supposed to want to sail away and hunt for treasure. But some of us here at Shmoop are both girls and want to go on treasure hunts, so we still love this book. Robert Louis Stevenson gives us a main character with whom his desired audience of ordinary boys can identify: a smart lad without too much money or education who comes out all right in the end. Sure Jim Hawkins is a little more imaginative and adventurous than many, but he is still average enough to be relatable.
Timothy (walks) to school everyday, and he lives four miles away.
Some poetic devices or sound devices in "The Road Not Taken" are the assonance in the first line, emphasizing the "o" sound in "roads" and "yellow," the alliteration in the third line of the second stanza with "wanted wear,". Also within this same line, the personification in the road "it was grassy and wanted wear." The poem, is a metaphor for the different directions one can take in their life.