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Poet: Robert Frost (Robert Frost Art)
Poem: 21.
Nothing Gold Can Stay
Volume: New Hampshire
Year: Published/Written in 1923
Poem of the Day:
Mar 12 2004
Comment 345 of 345, added on January 29th, 2010 at 12:00 AM.
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Comment 344 of 345, added on May 7th, 2009 at 1:37 AM.
In Robert Frost’s poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” you see his true talent for relating his poetry with the reader. Robert Frost wrote everything he got the chance to however he often wrote about weather and nature as did E.E. Cumming. Many of Robert Frost’s poems show his mastery of iambic rhythm. Robert Frost truly believed in doing what makes you happy. His poetry is what made him happy as did his family. His poems show that as long as you show your meaning truthfully your poem has succeeded because the point of poetry is to express yourself or some type of emotion. Most of his poems, including “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” and the majority of poems in general have multiple meanings.
Sarah Landry from United States
Comment 343 of 345, added on May 7th, 2009 at 1:19 AM.
Nothing Gold Can Stay appears in Robert Frost’s later books called New Hampshire. In this poem he tackles two literary devices to give the poem more meaning and make it more simplistic. Rather than going into detail about nature, he uses personification to bring it to life. Using this allows him to simplify a broad subject into a symbolic figure. Also he uses an allusion from the bible calling upon Eden; the great garden that humans were banished from. As it sinks away we realize that nothing good will last forever not even natures most beautiful and sacred of places.
tom anderson from United States
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