After Apple Picking Essays

  • after apple picking

    871 Words  | 2 Pages

    Subject: Write an explication of After Apple Picking. Robert Frost’s poem, After Apple-Picking, describes the personal reflections of an elderly man who lives on an apple orchard. This old man has lived a good life, and now must contemplate its quality and meaning. By performing an honest assessment of his past, the old man is better able to accept his inevitable future. The first six lines of this poem develop the situation in which the speaker has found himself. He has led a long and successful

  • Comparing After Apple-picking to Apples

    1088 Words  | 3 Pages

    concepts. These can be interpreted in many different ways, however, and poets often use the same symbols to produce varying effects. By comparing "After Apple-picking," by Robert Frost and "Apples," by Laurie Lee one can see how the poets coincidentally use similar subjects to discuss a broader, more meaningful issue. Both Frost and Lee use the apples in their poems to illustrate the relationship between man and nature, and to emphasize the importance of allowing natural processes to occur without

  • Robert Frost’s After Apple-Picking

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    Robert Frost’s “After Apple-Picking” Set in the evening of a late autumn day at the end of harvest time, Robert Frost’s “After Apple-Picking” can be interpreted in two ways. The first is that the poem is an insight into Frost’s thoughts on the triviality of life, especially his own. The second is that it is a metaphor for the Bible story of Adam and Eve. Whatever the interpretation, there is a tension between feelings of regret and satisfaction that is created and sustained throughout the entire

  • The True Meaning of After Apple Picking

    2267 Words  | 5 Pages

    The True Meaning of After Apple Picking After Apple Picking has become so familiar and revered that it is difficult to recognize its strangeness. But it would probably seem familiar in any case; it is a prime example of how even the very great poems of Frost can induce a kind of ease about their deeper intensities. It is a proud poem, as if its very life depends upon a refusal to justify itself by any open evidence of what it is up to. The apparent "truth" about the poem is that it is really

  • Comparing the Voice of Frost in Mending Wall, After Apple-Picking, and The Wood-Pile

    1354 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Voice of Frost in Mending Wall, After Apple-Picking, and The Wood-Pile The "persona" narratives from the book - "Mending Wall," "After Apple-Picking," and "The Wood-Pile" - also strive for inclusiveness although they are spoken throughout by a voice we are tempted to call "Frost." This voice has no particular back-country identity, nor is it obsessed or limited in its point of view; it seems rather to be exploring nature, other people, ideas, ways of saying things, for the sheer entertainment

  • After Apple Picking, by Robert Frost

    1051 Words  | 3 Pages

    paper is about “After Apple Picking,” by Robert Frost, from the perspectives of Carl Phillips and Priscilla Paton. I would like to focus more on Carl Phillips discussion of “After Apple Picking” as his article has more focus on an actual argument on what “After Apple Picking” is about compared to Paton’s article which is more about how Frost went about writing his poems though his usage of metaphors and vague colloquialisms . Neither article was solely about “After Apple Picking,” but both had a

  • Robert Frost's "After Apple-Picking"

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    Robert Frost's "After Apple-Picking" In the poem “After Apple-Picking”, Robert Frost has cleverly disguised many symbols and allusions to enhance the meaning of the poem. One must understand the parallel to understand the central theme of the poem. The apple mentioned in the poem could be connected to the forbidden fruit from the Garden of Eden. It essentially is the beginning of everything earthly and heavenly, therefore repelling death. To understand the complete meaning of Frost’s poem one

  • Symbols in After Apple Picking by Robert Forst

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    themselves when they feel the end of their life might be near. In “After Apple Picking”, Robert Frost uses the symbols of a ladder, apples, and sleep to transform the simple job of apple picking into a poem about the end of a man’s life drawing to a close and its worth. From the beginning of the poem, Frost eludes to a more significant meaning when he says the ladder is poking up “through a tree / Toward heaven…” (1-2). The apple picker’s ladder is a symbol for Jacob’s ladder as described in the

  • Analysis Of Robert Frost's After Apple Picking

    1533 Words  | 4 Pages

    Standards As Seen Through Robert Frost’s “After Apple-Picking” Weaving in and out of a dream-like state, the persona of Robert Frost’s, “After Apple-Picking,” explores the tendency of man to set impossible personal standards and the desire to give in to the, “long sleep,” (After, 536) when these standards aren’t met. Through deeply intricate structure Frost paints a portrait of a man on the brink of self proclaimed failure and the exhaustion he faces after spending so long fighting his inevitable

  • Comparing Mending Wall And After Apple Picking

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    us speculate about future possibilities-makes pretty good sense. So, pack up your swag and lets get cracking. The three texts that show this are two poems by my mate Robert Frost “After Apple-Picking” and “Mending Wall” as well as the 2012 short film “Paperman” directed by John Kahrs (Pronounced cuss). “After Apple-Picking” by my mate Robert Frost reveals that discoveries can lead us to new worlds and values, stimulate new ideas and enable us to speculate about future possibilities. ________________

  • Literary Analysis Of After Apple Picking By Robert Frost

    2040 Words  | 5 Pages

    Literary analysis of the poem “After Apple picking” by Robert Frost Eliani Hoyt Professor: Patricia Pallis ENG 102: Literature and Composition Introduction Robert Lee Frost can be considered as one of the best poets in the world of poetry. He was an American by birth and highly recognized as one of the realistic poet. He had lot of skills in rural life and colloquial English in American literature. He has written several poems on nature and the rural life mist of them have become realistic

  • Death in Poetry

    1593 Words  | 4 Pages

    Ice-Cream," Frost's "After Apple-Picking," and Whitman's "The Wound-Dresser" and is hinted at in many other poems. This essay will discuss how the different poets treat the subject differently in relation to various aspects of composition, such as style, form, theme, tone, imagery, metaphor, and diction. Whitman describes the horrible scene that he sees as a nurse on a battlefield, including injured and dying soldiers. Frost describes life and death in a metaphor of apple picking. The narrator of

  • Images Of Apple Picking

    809 Words  | 2 Pages

    Images of Apple Picking Dr. Hofer “After Apple Picking” is fraught with imagery. Frost uses visual, olfactory, kinesthetic, tactile, and auditory imagery throughout this piece. Because the poem is filled with a variety of images, the reader is able to imagine the experience of apple picking. Frost brings He begins with “My long two-pointed ladder’s sticking through a tree” (line 1). This line gives the reader a visual concept of a long pointed ladder nestled in an apple tree. And, allows the reader

  • Robert Lee Frost

    1456 Words  | 3 Pages

    figures in American history – inspiring this anthology – “Robert Frost – Breaking the Walls.” Some of the famous poems included in this anthology consist of, “The Road Not Taken”, “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening”, “Mending Wall” and “After Apple Picking.”. “The Road Not Taken” reflects Frost’s opinion that society is stressful, as the speaker agonizes over a life decision represented by the division of a road. “The Road Not Taken” involves ‘life’s choices’, and can be directly related to

  • Human Imperfection Illustrated in Frost's Poem, After Apple Picking

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poem “After Apple Picking” by Robert Frost expresses the feelings of the narrator during and after the process of harvesting apples by showing the sustainability and ambition of human spirit. Frost’s poem is an accurate reflection of life and of human imperfection through the use of repetition, literal and figurative language and various symbols. The repeated use of the word “sleep” resonates throughout the poem and suggests that the narrator is experiencing fatigue and weariness, “I am drowsing

  • Nature in Robert Frost's Poems

    1636 Words  | 4 Pages

    Under the stars of the sky, fifteen-year old Robert Frost explored the heavens through a telescope. He was seeking affirmation of the proverbial question that has plagued mankind for centuries—the proof and existence of God. While surveying the cosmos, Frost‘s interest was stirred, so he visited a library and obtained books that had illustrated star charts. Within these pages, his knowledge of the stars was edified and a poet was born. Frost‘s first poems were ―astronomical‖ and invoked a kinship

  • The Use of Metaphors in Frost's, “After Apple Picking”, “Birches”, and “The Silken Tent”

    1053 Words  | 3 Pages

    which orientational metaphors are used and also connect with the symbol of toward heaven and then coming back to earth. In particular, “After Apple Picking”, “Birches”, and “The Silken Tent” are writings that display a misconception of a subject; nevertheless there is in fact another meaning behind it. As we begin to take a closer look at “After Apple Picking” it is evident that every line of this poem contains a representation of metaphor. For example, “My long two-pointed ladder’s sticking

  • Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening By Robert Frost Analysis

    2012 Words  | 5 Pages

    “promises to keep” (Frost 245), the speaker for “After Apple-Picking” is obligated to finish “the great harvest” (Frost 240). Moreover, the metaphors of both poems share similarities. While the metaphor for “Stopping by Woods on a Snow Evening” is humans are unique for their ability to stop and reflect on the beauty of nature, in “After Apple-Picking” the speaker reflects upon his life and calculates all the missed opportunities, the “two or three / apples I didn’t pick,” and the desire for a release

  • The Dark Side of Robert Frost’s Nature

    2355 Words  | 5 Pages

    line of the nature’s poet’s poems. The everyday objects present in his poems provide the reader an alternative perspective of the world. Robert Frost uses all the elements of poetry to describe the darker side of nature. After analyzing the Poem Mending Wall and After Apple Picking it is clear that nature plays a dark and destructive role for Robert Frost. This dark side of Frost’s poetry could have been inspired from the hard life he lived. The vivid imagery, symbolism, metaphors make his poetry

  • Imagery and Modernization: A Study of Robinson and Frost's Poetry

    712 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poets Edwin Robinson and Robert Frost describe imagery, attitudes, and perception within the poems Miniver Cheevy and After Apple Picking in relation to the rapid modernization of America 's modern society in the early nineteenth century. Destruction and progression influenced the nation’s geographic looks. Values and traditions began to shift into a much more complex perspective. Frost and Robinson, in multiple ways, used the idea of imagery in poetry to respond to the chaos and tensions that