Robert Frost's "The Pasture" is a two-stanza poem with a xAAx rhyme scheme, written in iambic pentameter except for the final line of each stanza, which utilizes iambic tetrameter. One example of a literary device in "The Pasture" is anthimeria, or the use of a word as a different part of speech than its normal usage. This literary device is utilized in the first line of the poem:
I'm going out to clean the pasture spring
This is an example of anthimeria because Frost is using "pasture," normally a noun, as an adjective modifying the noun "spring." Frost additionally uses alliteration, or the repetition of beginning sounds, in the following line:
(And wait to watch the water clear, I may)
Finally, the poem contains one example of repetition as a literary device. Each of the two stanzas ends with the same line, which is the following:
I sha'n't be gone long. You come too.
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