Personification. Both the winter wind and the bitter sky are personified, the first as someone "not so unkind as man's ingratitude", and the second as someone who "dost not bite so nigh as benefits forgot".
It's not a poem, it's a song lyric. See the related link
aabccd, ddeffe, dddd
abcddcee
the first stanza
yes please
broken
yes, a hyperbole is exaggeration which is in its own form a figure of speech. For example I'm bored to death.
personification
'Out of the blue' is a terse form of the expression 'out of a clear blue sky' (to mean 'unexpectedly, without foreshadowing'). It is not really a figure of speech, but an idiom. ('idiom':: an established expression in a language where the meaning is not necessarily what one would anticipate from the given meaning of the individual words).
The word 'charismatic' is the adjective form of the abstract noun charisma.The noun 'charismatic' is a concrete noun as a word for a person, an adherent of a charismatic religious sect.
This figure of speech is antithesis.
broken
yes, a hyperbole is exaggeration which is in its own form a figure of speech. For example I'm bored to death.
Antithesis A+
personification
A terset is a figure of speech that consists of three lines of verse that form a complete unit.
a figure of speech in the form of a question that is used to make a point
I would say figure skating. Dancing is a form of art and figure skating is dancing in skates on ice. It's very artistic and beautiful to watch.
Hyperbole is a literary form of exaggeration. Hyperbole is a figure of speech that adds emphasis through the use of over-the-top language.
'Out of the blue' is a terse form of the expression 'out of a clear blue sky' (to mean 'unexpectedly, without foreshadowing'). It is not really a figure of speech, but an idiom. ('idiom':: an established expression in a language where the meaning is not necessarily what one would anticipate from the given meaning of the individual words).
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost uses the figure of speech of personification to give human qualities to the woods and the owner's horse, creating a sense of mystery and depth in the poem. Another example is "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe, which uses the figure of speech of symbolism in the form of the raven to represent the narrator's descent into madness and despair.
The singular possessive form for the noun winter is winter's.