Robert Frost Compare/Contrast Essay

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Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening Versus Desert Places by Robert Frost Is it possible to utilize the same theme for two unlike literary works? Could this progidy be accomplished without alike hidden meanings? Robert Frost has done such in the poems Desert Places and Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening. In these two distinct poems, Frost shared the same theme of a snowy scenario, but his meaning in both greatly differ from one another. In Desert Places, Frost uses a tranquil language to describe the feeling of loneliness. He begins the poem by introducing the narrator passing by a winter’s landscape. The narrator defines his view as being “almost covered smooth in snow.” The expressive language used by Frost in this poem can make the reader feel how the narrator is feeling. In the reader’s point of view, the narrator’s message could be about being depressed and feeling alone, but with acceptance of these feelings. The solitary narrator finds comfort by connecting his inward loneliness with the outside reality. The narrator …show more content…

Such language may be deceiving and erroneously lead the reader to think that Frost maybe be talking about loneliness. On the contrary, he only intended for this poem to be clear simple by describing the narrator and his horse passing by a winter’s land and stopping to watch the beautiful view. The narrator seems to enjoy the scenery and forget about reality for a moment but the horse reminds him, by shaking his bells, that they must continue their journey because they have “miles to go” before their final destination. The final destination was not clearly expressed but the line “promised to keep” does convey that the narrator must have important affairs to

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