On ‘Acquainted with the Night’ ‘Acquainted with the Night’ by Robert Frost is the kind of poem I would read if I were up late at night‚ feeling disconnected from my friends and family. It has a sort of comforting eeriness‚ the kind that could lull you to sleep‚ yet keep you up thinking for hours. It makes me feel detached and lonesome‚ but still at rest. Robert Frost’s imagery like “I have outwalked the furthest city light” and “one luminary clock against the sky” gives the reader a calm but
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debilitating a poem’s content with forced rhymes. Commentary This is a poem to be marveled at and taken for granted. Like a big stone‚ like a body of water‚ like a strong economy‚ however it was forged it seems that‚ once made‚ it has always been there. Frost claimed that he wrote it in a single nighttime sitting; it just came to him. Perhaps one hot‚ sustained burst is the only way to cast such a
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Eng 1102 September 19‚ 2013 Robert Frost: “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” is about a man who stops to admire snowfall in woods as he is travelling from farms to market. Caught between reality and fantasy‚ the poem is full of contrasts and irony. Life is so busy that often at times adults cannot enjoy Earth’s beauty. The narrator’s description‚ “The woods are lovely‚ dark and deep”‚ sounds as if he just realized how much beauty he
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Zhikulina Christina 303a Phonostylistic Analysis of the poem. (‘A player in spring’ by Robert Frost) In this poem lines written are performed in iambic tetrameter. There are four stanzas or we can say that it is a quatrain with four lines. For the English language‚ as well as for this verse‚ thanks to the reduction of endings and prevailing in the traditional words are monosyllabic‚ this characteristic of masculine rhyme. Wordsworth’s poem written masculine rhyme. Sound structure
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Kiara Houston Ms. Stopka English 1H‚ per 5 1/21/14 Poem Analysis/ “The Road Not Taken” In “The Road Not Taken‚” Robert Frost gives his readers a speaker standing at a “fork” in the road- or having to make a decision. Robert Frost uses extended metaphor‚ irony‚ and an unreliable narrator to show his reader’s that‚ when choosing life courses‚ one must consider where the path is actually going verses from how it may appear. Decisions fill the lives of human beings‚ and this speaker faces the
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Critical response Robert Frost –The Oven Bird This poem contains 14 lines and is written mainly in iambic pentameter with a little variation in some lines. Each line rhymes with some other line‚ but there is no regular rhyme pattern. Nevertheless‚ you can call this poem a sonnet in my opinion‚ because it contains the key features of a sonnet: Iambic pentameter‚ an octave (eight lines) and a sestet (six lines) and a theme linked to nature. As mentioned‚ the base metrical pattern of this poem is
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Cheyenne Johnson August 22‚ 2013 Poem Analysis “‘Out‚ Out-‚’ ‘’ by Robert Frost My emotions toward this poem are depressed‚ forlorn‚ and melancholy. In “’Out‚ Out-‚’”‚ a young boy is at work about to go to dinner when suddenly the saw cuts off his hand. A boy his age shouldn’t have to die doing a man’s job. Work back then had unimaginable conditions that made you want to cry. The line that struck out at me the most was “Don’t let him cut my hand off- The‚ When he comes. Don’t let him sister
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describe Frost’s views on things that are much larger and more universal. He suggests that everything has its own design‚ even things as small as spiders. I believe that this poem is about fate. Frost describes the spider at first as being light-colored and pure. From the very first line‚ the spider in Robert Frost’s Design is quite unusual. A white spider is something most people don’t see everyday. While reading the poem one wonders if the intense irony of the all white flower‚ moth and spider is
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“Nothing Gold Can Stay” Robert Frost desires his poetry to “begin in delight and end in wisdom.” He achieves this as seen in “Nothing Gold Can Stay‚” using metaphors‚ soft alliterations and wise biblical allusions showing that everything beautiful and young comes to an end. The Poem begins with metaphors which make comparisons to the beauty of youth. “Natures first green is gold‚” compares the precious beauty of first stages to the priceless value of gold. “Her early leaf’s a flower‚” demonstrates
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made all the difference." Robert Frost’s "The Road Not Taken" is a lyrical poem about the decisions that one must make in life. When a man approaches a fork in the road on which he is traveling‚ he must choose which path to take. The choice that he makes‚ as with any choices made in life‚ affects him in a way that "has made all the difference." Thematically‚ the poem argues that no matter how small a decision is‚ that decision will affect a person’s life forever. Frost uses the images presented
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