Step-by-step explanation:
Yes, there are instances of alliteration, assonance, and repetition in the poem "The Path to Home". Here are the examples:
Alliteration:
Stanza 1, line 1: "mother at the doorway"
Stanza 2, line 1: "Men have sought for gold"
Stanza 2, line 2: "struggled for achievement's"
Stanza 3, line 1: "Nothing so important as the mother's"
Stanza 4, line 2: "dreams all tangled up"
Assonance:
Stanza 1, line 3: "shaggy asters blooming"
Stanza 2, line 2: "fruit of pomp and glory"
Stanza 2, line 5: "never any laughter"
Stanza 3, line 1: "Nothing real except the beauty"
Repetition:
Stanza 1, lines 1 and 2: "the" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 1, lines 3 and 4: "And" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 2, lines 1 and 2: "Men have" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 2, lines 5 and 6: "For there's" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 3, lines 1 and 2: "Nothing" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 3, lines 4 and 5: "And the" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 4, lines 1 and 2: "So where'er" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 4, lines 5 and 6: "With the" is repeated at the beginning of each line
Stanza 4, lines 7 and 8: "These are all" is repeated at the beginning of each line