explain the poem dust of snow in own word
Answers
Answer:
Dust of Snow is only eight lines long and seems to be the simplest of short poems. With full end rhyme and short lines on the surface the two stanzas appear to be nothing more than a snapshot of a trivial event concerning a crow, a tree, snow and a human being.
Yet, as always with Robert Frost, you know that beneath the surface there will develop deeper worlds of meaning and possibility. As Frost himself wrote:
'It is what is beyond that makes poetry - what is unsaid in any work of art. Its unsaid part is its best part.'
So it is with this tiny poem. The reader might take only fifteen seconds to recite it but once finished there could well be several hours spent on, or several ways of, working out what the message is, if any.
Dust of Snow has as its main themes:
communication between nature and humans.
nature healing and helping with negative human emotions.
the significance of small natural events
First published in 1923 in the book New Hampshire, this little poem has remained popular because it juxtaposes two fundamentals - human complexity and animal simplicity - in such a compact and symbolic form.
The other outstanding feature of Dust of Snow is that it is so accessible, like many of Frost's more popular poems, the reader being taken under that same tree to experience the crow and the snow.
And yet, as the analysis will show, there's much more going on in what appear to be lines of simple, straightforward language
Explanation:
the poet set on below the tree and the tree cover full of white snow the poet are very sad and depress suddenly the crow come and set on the trump of tree soo the snow is fall on the shoulder of the poet cold snow than poet realise that i am wasting my time if this crow is not come today i wast my whole day than i am feel bad