In the short story “Hunters in the Snow” Wolff uses the snow and cold atmosphere as a symbol of impact on the characters to create a theme of crisis, conveying the uncertainties and intricacy of human interaction and personal struggle. The weather itself plays a crucial role in defining the theme for this story. Winter is the symbol of death, hibernation, or depression. The snow also adds to the cold weather as a symbol of a blanket that obscures, and covers the secrets of loneliness, emptiness, and the coldness within each character’s personality.…
to themselves, Frost uses this to tell the story in ‘The Wood-Pile’ showing how this poem is moving forward it is an expedition. ‘The hard snow held me, save where now and then’ the words used here come across as very harsh as snow is normally soft not hard, this inflicts the change in the nature in the area of where the narrator is it always uses visual imagery so the picture of the woods is shown. ‘A small bird flew before me’ A technique that Frost uses is anthropomorphism which is used for the bird, as he shows him as if it is his "last stand".…
“I have passed by the watchman on his beat and dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain” (II. 5-6). Depression causes a person to distance themselves from the world. It also causes them to not want to associate themselves with people. In the poem, “Acquainted with the Night,” by Robert Frost, a persona seems to be walking aimlessly alone at night in the rain. The persona passes a watchman whom he refuses to associate himself with, so he drops his eyes. The persona also hears “an interrupted cry” that isn’t meant for him, showing how lonely he is. Robert Frost uses many metaphors and symbols to represent things such as depression and hope. In fact, in the poem,…
If the poem is the case of his conscience, then the individual is perhaps tortured or agonized by something of the past. Frost shows this theme when the door is knocked twice. The person in the poem does not open the door, but he acknowledges the knock. These knocks represent the regrets that the individual has had in his past which is presented in the last two lines of the second stanza, And raised both hands/In prayer to the door. The speaker knows he must open the door and face whatever is behind it, but he seems to be resigned by the knock, as if he can only exist but not thrive. Thus by running away, the individual tinks he can solve the problem, I climbed on the sill/And descended outside. The person in the poem even tries to fool the knock,Back over the sillI bade a Come inTo whoever the knockAt the door may have beenHowever, the person only fools himself when he decides to escape his conscience and go back to the real world. Unfortunately, when faced with the real world, the person once again hides away from his conscience, knowing that it is inevitable to escape his past and his conscience because he will be tormented again. However, as he hides in a new world and Alters with age Frost shows that the person is changing, getting older, altering in a physical fashion. So hopefully, the person will also change in maturity and recognize that when his conscience knocks again, it becomes a window of opportunity.…
In the first stanza, the setting is developed with the use of words ‘night’ and ‘snow’ and they both carry negative connotation. Snow is employed throughout the poem to show the lack of identity; it also has characteristics of cold and formless white sheet. This observations show an image of snow falling fast, destroying the beauty of the field and covering up everything that is living. Similarly the ‘night’ has a negative connotation of darkness, the blackness and visionless that…
In Robert Frost’s poem, “ The Road Not Taken,” he is telling a life lesson between the lines. He uses literary elements such as alliteration(line 8) and personification(line 8) to make his poem run more smoothly. He uses lines of imagery to help the reader understand the poem and visualize the scenes throughout the poem. The poem is an entertaining story but at the same time, it is teaching us a lesson about our life’s choices. Robert Frost writes this poem during a time when most poets were leaving the more traditional ways of writing and transitioning more to viewing the world in a pessimistic way.…
Robert Frost's poem, "Birches," points out that at certain times in life, it can be good to go back to what was once simple and true, like when children swing on the branches of trees. The setting of the poem is winter time and Frost seems like an old man wishing to be back in his youth. This paper will examine Frost's poem in depth to identify all the literary elements that are used. After the literary elements are identified, this paper will show how Frost himself wishes to be a child again swinging on the branches of birch trees.…
Frost uses nature as the main symbol in his poem to make the message in his poem easier to interpret. The cycle of life and death shown through…
Robert Frost effectively utilizes literary techniques involving metaphors, personification and imagery to describe internal struggles prevalent throughout life. Although, “Desert Places” and “The Road Not Taken” differ in the messages they bring to the reader’s attention and general themes, they both describe internal struggle dealt with by the narrator and use the setting as a metaphor. Desert Places, is based on the theme of loneliness and isolation. The narrator does not appear to believe that they will feel better anytime soon “…Will be more lonely ere it will be less” (Frost, 10).…
Throughout Frost 's poetry it is clear to envisage that Frost himself had experienced great loss. His poem’s take you through some of the stages of grief he had experienced at various points in his life. There is a certain cathartic quality to his poems, it is obvious Frost used the medium of creative writing as a release from his grief, enabling him to process his losses, to accept and heal from them.…
In the poem “A Young Birch”, Robert Frost establishes the futility of existence despite having beauty through the use of symbols, structure, and imagery. Although the birch tree is beautiful, its life is meaningless and its death is unavoidable. The speaker describes the birch tree’s life, but in the end, the struggles that the birch tree faced were pointless.…
In this poem, ‘Frost at Midnight’, the poet expresses his fear in solitude for his baby, sitting beside a fire. , “Frost at Midnight” relies on a highly personal idiom whereby the reader follows the natural progression of the speaker’s mind as he sits up late one winter night thinking. His idle observation gives the reader a quick impression of the scene, from the “silent ministry” of the frost to the cry of the owl and the sleeping child.…
“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” written by Robert Frost, was on of his most famous works. Robert Frost was an American poet but most of his poems were written while he was in England, and they were published there. “Stopping by Woods” is a great poem because it is easy to understand, but when you read it again there is something more to it. One begins ask is the author trying to say something else. Thus the reader has two ways to analyze this poem, the surface analysis and the deeper analysis. The reader is also able to learn that this poem has two main themes; choices and isolation.…
Romantic writers describe nature in three different seasons. The first of these seasons is winter. The winter season until the first snowfall is portrayed as a time of despair and agony because of its dark and dreary feeling. During the first snowfall, though, the snow falls “Flake by flake, healing and hiding the scar that renewed our woe.” The snow of winter minimizes the grayness of winter bringing a conversion from sadness to hope. The snow on the trees brings delight to those who view the beauty of nature.…
During his life, Robert Frost, the icon of American literature, wrote many poems that limned the picturesque American Landscape. His mostly explicated poems “Birches” and “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” reflect his young manhood in the rural New England. Both of these poems are seemingly straightforward but in reality, they deal with a higher level of complexity and philosophy. Despite the difference in style and message, “Birches” and “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” are loaded with vivid imagery and symbolism that metaphorically depict the return to the nature and childhood, the struggle between reality and imagination, and also freedom and captivation.…