First read through the poem without analyzing. Then read through it again and start to highlight important bits in it. Then you read the bits you have analyzed and you explain whether the phrase or word could signify something and have a meaning. And that's about it :)
Answer:
Explanation:
The poet of these lines, Edna St. Vincent Millay, imagines a speaker who is sick of spring and everything that goes along with the season changing. Millay employs word choice such as "stickily" in order to make the beauty of new leaves growing on the trees seem grotesque. She also names the leaves as "little" further diminishing the importance of the season changing. The speaker calls out directly to April in the first line ("To what purpose, April, do you return again?"). This line can be read as threatening or condecensing in light of the word choice in the poem as the speaker is angry at April's return. The speaker concluses that "I know what I know," marking themselves as more knowledgable about the world than spring and April.
All of them except cloth maker
Answer:
a division of a poem consisting of two or more lines arranged together as a unit.
Explanation:
The action and the problem and solution or problem and effect that happend that the character learned from even the reader