Are you ready? Come on along and read some homespun poetry as well as a jot and tittle regarding distinguished poets and their works. Gael offers a positive balance of her own nostalgia notes and poetic meanderings with those of others. [Editor's note: Gael no longer contributes to Silver Planet, but we have made her archived blog entries available as a service to our readers.]
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Desert Places
(Robert Frost, 1874–1963)
Snow falling and night falling fast, oh, fast |
Robert Frost’s 1934 poem seems to plod with loneliness and depression. We read that everything is covered by snow, the beauty of variety and color in the countryside is gone, hidden. Even animals have left the scene. His word picture causes me to think the animals have no problem with being alone because they are cozy or hibernating—whereas humans must deal with being scared and alone. A snow-covered field is the desert, and the desert hidden within the writer seems to be a missing element from his life. He is isolated—and yet he will endure. To me, the poem recognizes that life goes on, no matter what.
Your opinion?
By Gael Stuart
The Silver Sage Blog
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