Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View
The speaker is a young woman exploring the world, telling her story in a first-person point of view.
Form and Meter
Common meter (iambic tetrameter alternating with quatrains) and a ballad meter
Metaphors and Similes
The “road” in the last line of stanza five is a metaphor for interpretation.
Alliteration and Assonance
Alliteration is in stanza one, line four, "Hurrying home." The consonant "h" is repetitive.
Irony
The primary irony is that the speaker reveals the mystical events that happen at night, and yet she promises that it is a secret that no one is supposed to know except herself and the spirits.
Genre
Five-Stanza ballad
Setting
Set in an undisclosed location in the woods at night.
Tone
The tone is ambivalent.
Protagonist and Antagonist
The poem’s protagonist is the speaker. There is no antagonist.
Major Conflict
There is a major conflict and the murmuring trees. The speaker says the trees hide something from her because they whisper in low tones.
Climax
The climax comes in stanza five when the narrator realizes that she has given secrets that she should safeguard about the magical world.
Foreshadowing
The brightening star foreshadows the speaker’s ability to interpret what she sees at night.
Understatement
n/a
Allusions
The poem alludes to John Donne's "The Apparition," which accounts for the paranormal world.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
n/a
Personification
The trees are personified when they murmur.
Hyperbole
There is an exaggeration in stanza four, line one, when the speaker says, "Of Robins in the Trundle bed." In reality, robins do not sleep on beds.
Onomatopoeia
Onomatopoeia is in line two of the second stanza when the speaker says, "A Hubbub as of feet." The hubbub imitates the commotion sound of walking men.