How was the poet boyhood like
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Answer:
Frost's main theme in "Birches" is that life is beautiful and good, more desirable than heaven. He was 40 when he published the poem, and it reveals the feelings of a man in middle age looking both ahead toward death and backward to childhood.
In the second half of the poem, the speaker imagines a boy climbing in the branches of the birch trees and then jumping back down to the ground. This boyish adventure is described in a wistful, fondly nostalgic tone. The boy, for example, flings himself from the branches "with a swish, / Kicking his way down through the air." The speaker wishes that he could be this boy once more and "get away from the earth awhile." This idea seems at first somewhat paradoxical. The speaker describes climbing in and jumping from the trees in almost a transcendental way, as if being amongst nature, and the physical world, is at the same time a means of transcending that world. Perhaps the idea is that, for the speaker, being at one with nature is a sort of meditative exercise and thus a way to forget about—or transcend—the ordinary problems of the real world. This is especially pertinent because the speaker is an adult ("I once myself [was] a swinger of branches . . . I dream of going back") reminiscing about his childhood. He, as an adult, is likely more mired in the real world now than he was then, so the transcendental relationship with nature that he perhaps took for granted as a child seems especially attractive to him now.
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