Robert Frost takes our imagination to a journey through wintertime with 
his two poems "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". These two poems reflect the beautiful scenery that is present in the snow covered woods and awakens us to new feelings. Even though these poems both have winter settings they contain very different tones. One has a feeling of depressing loneliness and the other a feeling of welcome solitude. They show how the same setting can have totally different impacts on a person depending on 
their mindset at the time. These poems are both made up of simple stanzas and diction but they are not straightforward poems.
In the poem "Desert Places" the speaker is a man who is traveling
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The speaker's depression stems mainly from his unwanted responsibility and feeling of regret. The basic conflict in the poem, which is resolved in the last stanza, is between an attraction toward the woods and the drudgery of life and responsibility outside of the woods. "And miles to go before I sleep,/ And miles to go before I sleep" (line 15-16).
The tone of the speaker in "Desert Places" is opposite of "Stopping by Woods", the speaker is much more bothered by his emotions and portrays a deep dark depressing mood. As the snow throws its blanket of whiteness over everything, to the speaker, it is a feeling of numbness. "The loneliness includes me unawares" (line 9). The speaker has lost his passion for life and is also in denial about feeling alone. He is at a stage where he just does not care about too much and he is feeling a bit paranoid. "They cannot scare me with their empty spaces" (line 13). He is saying who cares how I feel; I do not need anyone else. "I have in me so much nearer home/ To scare myself with my own desert places" (line 15-16). The speaker was starting to realize that he had shut himself off to the world. He recognized that this winter place was like his life. He had let depression and loneliness creep in and totally take over like the snow that had crept up on the woods and covered it. If he continues to let these feelings run
A place of warm days and chilly nights, filled with scorching afternoon, a desert can occupy all these strengths, but rarely has snow. Robert Frost’s “Desert Places” elaborates on the times in life where a place is filled with something opposite to what is thought would be there. Frost uses the story of the narrator’s struggles to illustrate the contradictions in life through juxtaposing nature and common words. Light and dark continuously play a concurrent theme throughout “Desert Places” by Robert Frost. Frost uses parallelism through nature to portray the juxtaposition through out the poem.
Both speakers ply nature as setting to express their emotion.the speaker in the poem “The Lonely Land”apply “cedar and jagged fir’s action” as setting to express the lonely environment of the poem and the negative attitude.
The poem as a whole appear to be a metaphor for, or symbolic of the depression and loneliness felt by the speaker . In the very first line “I have been one acquainted with the night” (I. 1), tells that the speaker knows of the ‘night’ (a metaphor for loneliness and depression). The speaker also personifies the night by being ‘acquainted’ with it. In the second line, the usage of the word ‘rain’ is a metaphor for life’s problems, which the speaker seems to be immersed with . In the third and fourth lines, the speaker uses hyperbole when he says “I have outwalked the furthest city light/ I have looked down the saddest city lane” (I. 3; II. 1), a feat not humanly possible, because the farthest city light would suggest the end of the city, and the word ‘saddest’ is a relative emotion. The words “city light” is also symbolic of a community and friends, which the speaker is trying to
Robert Frost’s poem “Desert Places” diminishes an overall sense of emptiness to being nothing compared to what he holds within himself through the use of connotative diction. Throughout the poem, the description of a cold, dark night represents the intensity of the depression that Frost was feeling. In the final stanza, Frost reveals that “I have it in me so much nearer home, To scare myself with my own desert places”, “it” being the darkness previously mentioned in the poem. Furthermore, the “desert places” introduced in the final line are a representation of the dark emotions Frost was experiencing, and to state that they were within him, provide the sense that he did not express them to other people, meaning he chose to be left with a cold, dark state of mind. Overall, “Desert Places” is deemed as Frost’s admittance to not fearing the troubles of the rest of the world, because they could not cause him any greater pain that what his own troubles already have.
The narrator feels isolated from everything, even though he is in the city. He roams around the city street back and forth in unfriendly conditions such as rain, filled with emptiness and hopelessness. In this poem, night is used as metaphor for depression- the narrator is not just acquainted with literally the night, he is acquainted with
In line twelve, the imagery of depression and absence of identity is furthermore supported when the speaker compares himself to the snow to say ‘With no expression, nothing to express’ (12) mentioning his lack of identity and him falling into loneliness.
While he lived Robert Frost enjoyed the recognition as an accomplished poet. He was a multiple Pulitzer Prize recipient as well as honoree of the Congressional Gold Medal. Considered one of the finest modernist poets of the twentieth century he favored traditional poetic structure. His poems to this day are admired for the depiction of the bucolic nature of New England and his practiced use of the everyday spoken word.
This means that the speaker is entranced by the beauty of the snowy woods, thinking they are lovely. The word “but” in line 14 indicates that although he wants to stay, he has promises to keep, so he must keep moving. The last two lines mean that he really is in the middle of nowhere. He must be really far from home if he feels the need to repeat that he’s got miles to
Poets use imagery to convey meaning, feelings, and emotions. The contemporary poet best know for his use of imagery is Robert Frost. The Road Not Taken, opened the eyes of poetic readers and critics to Frost’s artistic creations. He uses forms of language such as diction and syntax to capture and move the reader.
Even though these poems share a similar theme, the narrators create lonesome feelings from their different settings. In "Desert Places" Frost describes the scenery in great detail. Since the poem in constructed around this description, there is distinct imagery which helps to visualize a secluded area in the snowy woods. He even includes
“Good fences makes good neighbors,” is a small portion from the Mending Wall written by one of modern times most proficient writers, Robert Frost. Two of the critical articles I examined were quite helpful in gaining a better understanding of the “Mending Wall” and also of Robert Frost’s poetry. The Gale Research shows the best and most effective understanding of the “Mending Wall,” mainly because it deals specifically with that poem. It basically states that the poem is built around two attitudes, that of the speaker, which the Gale critic presumes is the poet, who is imaginative and an independent thinker and that of the neighbor, who prefers not to question anything (Gale). The other article deals more with other poetry that Robert
“Nature is always hinting at us. It hints over and over again. And suddenly we take the hint.” This quote was taken from Robert Frost and demonstrates his feelings toward nature. Robert Frost is a well known American poet who draws on nature as the subject of his poems. There are three main things that account for Robert Frost’s poetry. In his poems, he uses familiar subjects, like nature, people doing everyday things and simple language to express his thoughts. His poems might be easy to read by some, but not necessarily east to understand. It is not hard to see through his poems, how deeply moved he is by the Earth. In many of Frost’s poems about nature, he recognizes the beauty of nature,
The Poet is Robert Frost. I believe that this poem in a political affiliation poem due to the fact that it has references to many things in today's world. Frost wrote the poem when he was 48years old. He suffered a lot of grief and family tragedies. It does appear in its original language. I don't believe that it is a part of another poem, but he does have a lot of written poems similar to these topics.It feel as tho this poem is more of a political concept then a literary movement. Robert felt that the world was going to end.
When looking at both Robert Frost’s and Emily Dickinson’s poems about darkness and night, several things are brought to light. This includes the different point of views provided by the speaker, the imagery left for the reader to depict, the structure of each poem, and how both poems connect to each other.
The repetition of the last two lines of the poem serves as a reminder of the conflict the narrator is dealing with regarding his desire to remain in the “lovely, dark, and deep” woods and see it “filling up with snow,” and his responsibilities, “the promises he has to keep” beyond the woods. Furthermore, the last two lines of the poem might be an indication that the narrator is fatigued, but cannot stop to take in the view because he has promises to keep.