As many times as you can count in a good exhaustive concordance
It is not biblical but from a poem by Edward Thomas.
It doesn't appear in the Bible, but vaguely similar phrases appear in the Apocryphal books and the Koran. It could even be part of a poem.
The word "dance" is repeated four times in the poem "Daffodils" by William Wordsworth.
The speaker spots the horse twice in the poem "The Horses."
One should read a poem as many times till he or she understands well the poem. For some, a glance would be enough to reveal its meaning. For some, multiple readings would be needed for the same.
13
11 times
No, the poem "For Everything There Is a Season" is not a contemporary poem. It is a verse from the Book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible, written many centuries ago.
In the first 12/14ths of the poem.
Read it many times. After reading it many, many times, try to say it out loud, one line, or a few lines, at a time, without looking at the written poem - then check with the written poem. Or say it out loud while a friend checks the written poem. Even if you can say the entire poem from beginning to end, continue practicing during the following days - you may forget parts of the poem again.
The pit is a symbol for hell. Many Christians referred to this poem for there belief along with the Bible. It symbolizes him becoming a christian and escaping the path to eternal death in the lake of fire.
When it comes to poetry, there is not a definite order in which images appear in a poem. With poetry, it is very unique and expressive. It also varies from person to person, so there is not an order.