A central idea of "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" is that the speaker wants to admire the beauty of nature in the woods.

How does this idea develop over the course of the poem?


The woods fill with snow, and the speaker realizes he must go before it gets too deep.

The snowy woods make the speaker feel lonely, and he becomes frightened and decides to leave.

The speaker stops to see the snowfall in the woods but knows his responsibilities won't allow him to stay long.

The speaker wonders if his neighbor is aware of the beauty in his woods and wants to tell him.

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Answer:

The speaker stops to see the snowfall in the woods but knows his responsibilities won't allow him to stay long.

Explanation:

The poem "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost is a poem where the speaker is in a dilemma between his duty and what he wants to do. Stuck between admiring the snowy woods and his duty living in society places him in a contrasting position.

While the central idea of the poem is that the speaker wants to admire the beauty of nature, he also acknowledges that it is "queer" even for his horse to stop in the middle of the woods. But as a man living in a society, he "ha[s] promises to keep, and miles before [I] sleep".

And through the presentation of how the speaker stops and admires the snowfall in the woods, he also knows that his responsibilities won't allow him to have this enjoyment/ leisure for a longer duration.

Thus, the correct answer is the third option.

Answer:

The speaker stops to see the snowfall in the woods but knows his responsibilities won't allow him to stay long.

Explanation: