“Nothing Gold Can Stay” means that nothing perfect can stay. In life, the best things are the ones that don’t last forever. The most beautiful things in life are the things that have the shortest life. In the poem, it says "Nature’s first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold”, this means that the most beautiful color of nature is gold, but it also is the hardest color to last. In the book when Johnny refers to “Nothing Gold Can Stay” he is telling Ponyboy to stay with all that innocence that they had in their childhood. When the Greasers were small, they were innocent, but when they grew to adults, they became less innocent, violent, mean, rule breakers, etc… So what Johnny wants is that Ponyboy doesn’t become violent, mean, rule breaker,…
However in ‘An old man’s winter night’ Frost thinks there is a fraught relationship between man and nature because in the poem the old man seems to fear nature, “and scared the outer night...” This is symbolic of the man’s fear of nature.…
As noted above, Frost uses many techniques to explain the significant of the poem. The most important aspect of the poem is the extended metaphor of the…
To begin with, Thomas writes in rhyming couplets which create an on-going effect of the individuals story also reflecting the oral tradition of the English countryside. He also writes in narrative lyric which gives this poem a song like undercurrent carrying the story fluidly and seamlessly. AOMWN is a narrative poem with an irregular rhyme scheme, Frost here reflects the conflict between man and nature as death approaches. Even though the poem is irregular in rhyme, frost makes use of internal rhyme such as assonance and alliteration which may illustrate how the character feels comfortable inside but has a fear of the natural environment, feeling almost as if it is against him.…
The poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” by Robert Frost relates to the Outsiders by S.E Hinton. Johnny was known as a gentle person, but when he killed Bob, everything changed. He and Ponyboy had a decent life, but now they had to run and hide in a church. The poem was probably put in the story to show that change can happen fast and that positive things may come to an end. For example, when Ponyboy and Johnny thought they were safe in the church a fire occurred all of a sudden.…
Frost uses the images presented in the poem in a very involved and general way. The paths and the fork no longer refer to their definitions, but instead as keywords in a description of life. Through the poem, Frost is defining life as a series of decisions. Some of these decisions may, at the time, be thought of as insignificant, while others could be thought of as very significant. Frost argues that a decision's significance at the time is not really important, for any choice will change one's life. Every day, people, including the narrator of the poem, are presented with "Two roads" that diverge "in a yellow wood." These roads are not concrete or physical, but rather represent choices. The fact that one road is "grassy and wanted wear" while the other was commonly traversed shows the reader that some choices require one to choose something that is not commonly sought or to do something…
Robert Frost once said poetry “begins in delight and ends in wisdom.” His poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” while short sends a powerful message and presents a unique insight into life’s cycle. Because of its length, Frost ensures that each word or sound is important to conveying his message. Filled with countless literary elements; the use of ambiguity, symbolism, paradox, imagery and metaphor help readers like myself identify with the poem.…
In the lyric poem, “Nothing Gold Can Stay” by Robert Frost, it describes the gorgeousness of nature in the morning sun by saying it was comparable to gold or a flower, and explains how it is saddening that it would go away when it nears day. And, with the use of a lyric poem which is a poem that expresses the thoughts or emotion of the speaker and it involves the use of a rhyme scheme he was able to explain his thought and emotions more clearly to the reader. Although the poem explains how nature is incomparably beautiful in the morning and sadly disappears closer to the day, he is able to illustrate the underlying meaning through the use of metaphors, personification, and…
Frost achieves his purpose of creating a poem which “begins in delight and ends in wisdom.” His use of metaphors, soft alliterations and biblical allusions illuminate the idea that everything beautiful eventually fades…
Nothing last forever, that is the point that Robert Frost is trying to make in “ Nothing Gold Can Stay”. The first and last line have many different interpretations. Gold is synonymous to the good things in life as is in real life. Gold is also seen as wealth or currency. Natures first green is most likely the first strand of grass to grow on earth to show that life evolve or even the first patch of grass after a long cold winter. He compares this to gold. While green and gold are very different colors, in life they are one in the same because in nature green is a sign of life and a sign of better things to come; the same way a person who strikes gold would feel. Seeing green as the first sign of spring would also give a person of the safety…
Nothing Gold Can Stay may be short but its a narrative because its telling a story…
Frost’s poems could be considered pessimistic or realistic. I think that the poem was expressing reality. It was balancing negative and positive aspects. For example in the poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, it shows the beauty as a rarity but also demonstrates that it existed. Another example is the poem “Birches”, which the boy took time away from his life filled with tasks to have fun climbing the birches.…
Nothing Gold Can Stay Robert Frost is one of the greatest poets of our time, and “Nothing gold can stay” is one of the many great poems I love by him. “Nothing gold can stay” holds a special place in my heart due to it being my very last show in the Laker Marching band. Of my three years of being in Color-guard I learned to embody music, books, and poems. Spending hundreds of hours on a show based off of this poem, it brought the meaning of it to me to new heights. At the end of the year I did not know it would be my last, but I am certainly happy with how I can compare my marching career to my last performance, the line “nothing gold can stay” resonates with me leaving the band and all the good things I had going for myself within the Color-guard, but that it was okay to leave because it was for my own good.…
Something I consider ‘’gold’’ is my grandpa, because he was always there for me and when I was down he gave me a big hug and helped me through the rough times I had. I lost my grandpa because of an Illness he had, he had a bad illness where he was in the hospital for most of the time and that made me very sad. I tried to hold onto him by spending a lot of time with him and taking care of him, because he liked it when I was there spending time with him. I was unsuccessful because my grandpa passed away, but I think of him everyday and in my heart I know he is here with us even through the rough times. In the poem ‘’Nothing Gold Can Stay’’ by Robert Frost, he states, “ Her hardest hue to hold “ which means you can't hold on to someone or something…
We start off the poem with Frost imagining a forest of bent birch trees. He wishes that the trees were bent by children playing on them, a nostalgic, childhood merriment that Frost once engaged in when he was a child, but we’ll get more into that later. Despite his lofty indulgence, he knows what really causes the birches to bend, and that is the “ice-storms”. Using this fact, he goes on to elaborate on the beauty of birch trees; such as comparing the falling ice from the trees as “crystal shells”, or as “the inner dome of heaven had fallen” and even going on to say the trailing leaves were “like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair before them over their heads to dry in the sun”. He tends to lose himself in this embellished fabrication…