Abandoned Farmhouse and Nothing Gold Can Stay have many differences and similarities like the theme, mood, and craft, rhyming, and topics. Abandoned Farmhouse and Nothing Gold Can Stay. Some similarities are that they have the same topic of change. Like in the line," Nature's first green is gold but her hardest hue to hold." This means that when you get something new like a plant it's the perfect shade of green, but once it gets older new colors come in and suddenly it's not as perfect as you got it. It changed. So once you get something new it only stays new for a little moment of time like in the line form Nothing Gold Can Stay," But Only So An Hour." this means that if you get something new it only stays new for a little sliver of time. However there is nothing that your or anyone can to stop change like in the line, "So dawn goes down to day Nothing Gold Can Stay" This …show more content…
Another Similarity is alliteration. In Nothing Gold Can Stay the line,"Her hardest hue to hold" the word hardest, hue, and hold all start with the same letters. In The Abandoned Farmhouse the line, "Bible with a broken back" the words bible, broken, and back all start with the same letters. The last thing that they have in common is loss. In Nothing Gold Can Stay the lines, "Her early leaf's a flower. But only so an hour. So Eden sinks to grief" In the lines, "So Eden sinks to grief" that means that she is sad that her early leaf is only perfect for a small amount of time. In Abandoned Farmhouse the lines,"Something went wrong says the empty house" so that means the man and women lost their house which is also like a loss because on the line, "Money was scarce." they're poor so that
In some ways both short stories were written with some similarities in mind. In both of the short stories that were told there was a death taken place which is a sad thing in stories that could affect the mood of the reader. After the death there is someone to clean it up and keep it secret so no one would know In both of the stories there is unique writing styles used to add effect to the story. These are some of the things that were used in both stories that kind of put them together as
Both “Fire and Ice” and “Nothing Gold Can Stay” are great reads. They have their differences, but they have similarity’s as well. Having the common themes, while staying unique is impressive. The shortness of good things, stressed in the first poem. As well as the argument of how the world will end. These poems by Robert Frost make you think, that is what makes them so memorable.
Johnny’s last words to Ponyboy were, “Stay gold, Ponyboy. Stay gold…”. I found this in Chapter 9, on pg. 148. Johnny is referring to the poem that can be found in Chapter 5, on pg. 78. When Johnny tells Ponyboy to stay gold, he is referring to the fact that Ponyboy was innocent when Johnny killed Bob. In the poem, gold is the first hue of nature, the hardest to hold, which also symbolizes children’s innocence.
“Nothing gold can stay” (77). These wise words from Robert Frost state that nothing can stay young forever. Johnny Cade is a quiet member of the Greasers gang. Johnny’s home life is rough, his father beats him and his mother could care less about him. The Greasers are the good gang from Tulsa, Oklahoma. Their rivals, the Socs, are preps who spend their time partying, or tormenting the Greasers. Throughout this story, Johnny is depicted as sensitive, selfless, and strong.
Have you ever heard of the poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay’? Well, in the book The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, this poem is used. It ties in by explaining how none of the Greasers, really have a childhood. They grew up very fast, and didn’t have much with toys, and friendship. The Greasers have each other and that’s all.
There are six things that Nothing Gold Can Stay and Abandoned farmhouse have in common. The things that the two poems have in common are: they both involve life, change, alliteration and sadness/ loss. In Nothing Gold Can Stay it involves life because the poem is about nature. I know this because it says in the poem " Her early leaf's a flower."
"Things depart which may never return" (2). Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem "To Wordsworth" portrays William Wordsworth as a once noble and inspirational figure, the "best poet of the age" (Probst). However, years later Wordsworth experienced a shift in his passion for poetry and his lost his golden insights which were a great disappointment to Shelley (book). Shelley thus chose to honor Wordsworth as an inspiring memory rather than a present failure. Ceasing Wordsworth’s existence post his golden decade, Shelley is able to remember Wordsworth with admiration.
The themes can be interpreted similarly; both poems are telling people to live life to the fullest. “Lucinda Matlock” is an example of what life could be if one really wants to enjoy it, but “George Gray” is an example of what not to do in life. George eventually realizes that he cannot be scared to be outgoing if he wants to enjoy life; he wants the life Lucinda lives. George is too terrified to go after it. These two poems describe two foil characters. They have a similar basis, but they are mostly opposites. These differences are what makes the themes similar. Another similarity in these poems is the titles. The titles, which are also the people’s names, describe the lives they led. Lucinda is a unique and different name and so was her life. George is a basic, common name, and Gray describes his dull and gloomy
Both of the poems have similar themes throughout their poems as well. Although they are expressed differently they both share a theme dealing with time moving by quickly and to live a life with no regrets.
"Her early leaf's a flower, but only so an hour, then leaf subsides to leaf, and Eden sank to grief, so dawn goes down to day. Nothing gold
To many people, nature is something of little thoughts, but when we take the time to stand back and acknowledge it, we can actually see its beauty. Robert Frost and William Wordsworth can see the beauty of nature, and both made use of the poetic devices to drive their poems, using similes, metaphors, and personification. Robert Frost suggests that nature's first green is gold. The “first green” of spring is precious, as valuable as “gold,” bursting with light and promise. We can interpret this line literally and figuratively.
All in all, the Poem “Nothing gold can stay” by Robert Frost and The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton the theme innocence is portrayed in similar ways. At some points in
One may think life is perfect when going right but, can this everlasting feeling stay forever? In the poem Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost, he clarifies that the innocence of youth cannot last forever. Frost also shows how perfection and beauty can be a temporary path to ones sorrow. Much like the garden of Eden with the ongoing futuristic consequences of good and evil on Earth.
The speaker says, “…older than the flow of human blood in my veins” (Line 1). Blood is only developed when a fetus is being grown, in the Mother, but within the blood lies DNA of their ancestors from past generations. The speaker uses human blood to relate to the fact that our blood is old and connected to our heritage because we carry their DNA inside of us. “I’ve seen its muddy bosom” (Line 9). Muddy, implies a bleak outlook of not being able to see the end. Lose of hope. “Turns all golden in the sunset” (Line 9) the ominous of a sparse future comes to an end with the sunset signifying hope and a new beginning. The association to his ancestors’ bleak past is his what binds their experiences to him.
Robert Frost has a fine talent for putting words into poetry. Words which are normally simplistic spur to life when he combines them into a whimsical poetic masterpiece. His 'Nothing Gold Can Stay' poem is no exception. Although short, it drives home a deep point and meaning. Life is such a fragile thing and most of it is taken for granted. The finest, most precious time in life generally passes in what could be the blink of an eye. 'Nothing Gold Can Stay' shows just this. Even in such a small poem he describes what would seem an eternity or an entire lifetime in eight simple lines. Change is eminent and will happen to all living things. This is the main point of the poem and