There is insufficient information in the question to answer it. You did not provide "these lines". Please restate the question.
Wordsworth addresses The Prelude to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, his fellow poet and friend.
The name of this poem, by John Keats, is "Ode to a Nightengale." Keats is presumably, therefore, addressing a nightengale with the lines, "That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees,/ In some melodious plot/ Of beechen green, and shadows numberless,/ Singest of summer i"n full-throated ease." at the end of the first stanza.
no she was a Chinese woman whom was a poet
homer
Anon
The poet uses an ABAB rhyme scheme in the first 8 lines of the poem. This means that the first and third lines rhyme, as do the second and fourth lines.
j dawg
She is a poet.
he loved to write about Maud Gonne whom he loved alot he was impress by her beauty he is a love poet
The poet wanted to meet Ernest because of his wise thoughts and great knowledge. The poet belonged to that valley only in which the man named Ernest lived who was full of wise thoughts. The poet was excited to meet a humble and wise man who belonged to his valley only.
yes he did as the last two lines of the poem suggest
A poet can prevent repeated lines in a villanelle from becoming tiresome by varying the language and imagery used in each repeated line, finding creative ways to reinterpret the repeated phrases, and introducing new elements or perspectives with each repetition to keep the poem engaging and fresh.