Respuesta :
I would say personification because they can't physically stand about the woodland.
Answer:
Personification.
Explanation:
Alfred Edward Housman's "A Shropshire Lad" is about the indifference of nature to the sufferings of human. This particular collection consists of sixty-three poems, among which "Loveliest of Trees" is one of them.
The poem "Loveliest of Trees" is about man's life duration. A man has about seventy years on average to live, and his twenty years have already gone. So, for the remaining fifty, he wants to go and enjoy the cherry blossoms while he can. Cherry blossoms represent a feminine love, the love that he will enjoy. So, for the remaining fifty that he has, he will go to the woodlands "to see the cherry hung with snow". The beginning of the lines-
"Loveliest of trees, the fruit now Is hung with bloom along the bough And stands about the woodland ride Wearing white for Eastertide."
personifies the cherry trees as a being that stands in the woodlands, wearing white.