Answer:
- Sight: "Cold, and weighted down/With two oranges in my jacket." "Frost cracking/Beneath my steps, my breath/Before me, then gone," "Her house, the one whose/Porch light burned yellow/Night and day," "A dog barked at me," "We/Entered, the tiny bell/Bringing a saleslady/Down a narrow aisle of goods," "Tiered like bleachers."
The poet makes the reader visualize the cold winter setting, the oranges in the protagonist's jacket, the frost cracking under his feet, the yellow porch light of the girl's house, the barking dog, the drugstore with its tiered candies, and the setting of fog between the trees.
- Hearing: "A dog barked at me," "Outside,/A few cars hissing past," "Fog hanging like old/Coats between the trees."
The sounds the reader hears is the dog barking, the hissing of passing cars, and the comparison the poet makes of the fog hanging to old coats.
The poet does not evoke any specific smells in this poem.
- Touch: "Cold, and weighted down/With two oranges in my jacket," "Breathing/Before a drugstore."
The reader can feel the cold feeling of the winter air and the weight of the oranges in the protagonist's jacket. They can also sense that the protagonist and the girl are breathing in anticipation before they enter the drugstore.
- Taste: "I took the nickel from/My pocket, then an orange,/And set them quietly on/The counter," "Her unwrap the chocolate," "I peeled my orange/That was so bright against/The gray of December."
The reader can taste the protagonist's oranges in his jacket and the chocolate the girl picks out at the drugstore. Additionally, the reader can sense the protagonist peeling his orange and its bright taste against the gray December sky.