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Is there any: Alliteration, Assonance, and Repetition in the poem

The Path to Home. (The poem is down below) If there is, please say where you found it, what sentence, and what words. Please and thank you.

Stanza 1 There's the mother at the doorway, and the children at the gate (A)
And the little parlor windows with the curtains white and straight.(A)
There are shaggy asters blooming in the bed that lines the fence,(B)
And the simplest of the blossoms seems of mighty consequence.(B)
Oh, there isn't any mansion underneath the starry some(C)
That can rest a weary pilgrim like the little place called home(C)

Stanza 2 Men have sought for gold and silver; men have dreamed at night of fame; (D)
In the heat of youth they've struggled for achievement's honored name; (D)
But the selfish crowns are tinsel', and their shining jewels paste, (E)
And the fruit of pomp and glory soon grows bitter to the taste. (E)
For there's never any laughter, howsoever far you roam, (F)
Like the laughter of the loved ones in the happiness of home. (F)

Stanza 3 There is nothing so important as the mother's lullabies, (G)
Filled with peace and sweet contentment, when the moon begins to rise. (G)
Nothing real except the beauty and the calm upon her face (H)
And the shouting of the children as they scamper round the place.(H)
For the greatest of man's duties is to keep his loved ones glad (I)
And to have his children glory in the father they have had. (I)

Stanza 4 So where'er a man may wander, and whatever be his care, (J)
You'll find his soul still stretching to the home he left somewhere.(J)
You'll find his dreams all tangled up with hollyhocks in bloom.(K)
And the feet of little children that go racing through a room,(K)
With the happy mother smiling as she watches them at play-(L)
These are all in life that matter, when you've stripped the sham away.(L)

User Eldes
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1 Answer

2 votes

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