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Literary Devices in After Apple-Picking

Literary Devices Examples in After Apple-Picking:

Text of the Poem

🔒 9

"The woodchuck could say whether it's like his Long sleep..."   (Text of the Poem)

Frost uses anthropomorphism in his portrayal of the woodchuck, or groundhog. Anthropomorphism is a type of personification in which nonhumans, particularly animals, are made to act like people. By attributing human behavior to a woodchuck, which hibernates during the winter, Frost reminds readers of the universal aspects of the human experience—such as death, which hibernation represents. Further, Frost possibly anthropomorphizes the woodchuck in order to symbolize the uncertainty and fear that the speaker feels when he wonders whether he will awaken as usual from his “human sleep.”

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"thousand thousand..."   (Text of the Poem)

Frost’s repetition of the word “thousand” is an example of epizeuxis, a device in which words are repeated without intervening words between them. In this context, epizeuxis further emphasizes both the speaker’s exhaustion and the excess of the “great harvest” that he once wanted.

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"boughs bend..."   (Text of the Poem)

Frost makes use of alliteration, or the repetition of consonant sounds, in this line. The repetition of the consonant sound “b” in the words “boughs” and “bend” enhances the bizarre imagery of the scene. Further, alliteration reinforces the poem’s increasingly irregular rhythm, which seems to mimic the disorienting experience of the speaker’s dream.

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"Stem end and blossom end,..."   (Text of the Poem)

This line contains a diacope, a device in which a word is repeated with intervening words in between. By repeating the word “end,” the speaker effectively captures what it is like being overwhelmed by the size and number of apples in his dream.

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"Magnified apples appear and disappear..."   (Text of the Poem)

Frost employs assonance, or the repetition of the same vowel sound in rapid succession, in this line. The words “magnified,” “apple,” and “and” contain the same “a” vowel sound, whereas the words “appear” and “disappear” contain a slightly different “a” vowel sound. In this case, assonance enhances the poem’s tone as the speaker describes the strange images in his dream.

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"The scent of apples: I am drowsing off. I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight..."   (Text of the Poem)

The repetition of words containing the letter “s” in these two lines is an example of sibilance, a device in which the consonant “s” is repeated in order to create a hissing sound when the poem is read aloud. In “After Apple-Picking,” sibilance enhances rhythm and calls attention to the imagery that the speaker is about to describe. Further, the hissing sound of sibilant words develops the poem’s progressively dreamlike tone.

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"But I am done with apple-picking now...."   (Text of the Poem)

Apple-picking serves as an extended metaphor, a literary device in which two different things are compared by implying or asserting that they are the same thing, for the ambitions and accomplishments that a person pursues throughout life. An extended metaphor unfolds throughout an entire text and usually uses smaller metaphors for reinforcement. In “After Apple-Picking,” the extended metaphor for a person’s ambitions and achievements is supplemented by the approaching winter sleep, or hibernation, which is a metaphor for death.

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"Apples I didn't pick upon some bough...."   (Text of the Poem)

Lines three, four, and five use enjambment, in which a thought or phrase that originates in one line continues into the following lines of verse. Enjambment creates movement and a sense of anticipation as the speaker gradually shifts from a waking to a sleeping state.

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"Beside it, and there may be two or three..."   (Text of the Poem)

Frost uses a caesura in his description of apples hanging beside the barrel that the speaker has left unfilled. A caesura is a break within a line of poetry, usually in the form of punctuation such as a comma (,), em dash (—), or ellipses (...). In this context, the comma in the middle of line four augments both the poem’s rhythm and its vivid imagery.

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