Friday, January 24, 2020
Hardships in Birches by Robert Frost Essay -- Birches Robert Frost Lit
Hardships in Birches by Robert Frost     In any life, one must endure hardship to enjoy the good times.  According to Robert Frost, the author of "Birches", enduring life's  hardships can be made easier by finding a sane balance between one's  imagination and reality. The poem is divided into four parts: an  introduction, a scientific analysis of the bending of birch trees, an  imaginatively false analysis of the phenomenon involving a New England  farm boy, and a reflective wish Frost makes, wanting to return to his  childhood. All of these sections have strong underlying philosophical  meanings. Personification, alliteration, and other sound devices  support these meanings and themes.    Frost supports the theme by using language to seem literal, yet if one  visualizes the setting and relates it to life, the literal and  figurative viewpoints can be nearly identical. Take this example:  "Life is too much like a pathless wood". This simile describes how one  can be brought down by the repetitive routine of day-to-day life, but  only if one processes the barren, repetitive forest scene that Frost  paints in that sentence. Sound devices also add to the effect of the  poem. Frost gives the image of the morning after an ice storm, as the  ice cracks on the birch trees: "They click upon themselves / As the  breeze rises, and turn many-colored / As the stir cracks and crazes  their enamel. / Soon the sun's warmth makes them shed crystal shells /  Scattering and avalanching on the snow crust--" The repeating /s/,  /z/, and /k/, sounds in this passage are strong examples of  alliteration, and sound devices are crucial in the image presented;  calm, reflecting, and romanticizing, like a quiet walk in the woods.  The /k/ sound is the sound...              ...cs implies that the upper  thrust of birch swinging gives a taste of heaven, as was stated  earlier involving ice storms: " Such heaps of broken glass to sweep  away / You'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen." The speaker  finds that swinging on a birch tree gives one a piece of heaven. The  ups and downs of the birch trees offer various contrasting experiences  that the speaker uses to keep himself sane. These rises and falls  represent heaven and earth, the difference of truth and realism,  rigidity and reckless enjoyment, adulthood and childhood, and flight  and return. These ups and downs are what Frost strives for. He lives  as a poet to constantly ride these birch trees, so he can find the  compromise between these figurative pleasures and pains, and according  to him, there is no better occupation:    "One could do worse than be a swinger of birches."                        
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