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Robert Frost

Essay by   •  November 9, 2010  •  727 Words (3 Pages)  •  1,468 Views

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He thought he kept the universe alone," to most people the thoughts of being alone are very frightening. It is human nature to search for companionship. In the poem "The Most of It," Robert Frost uses a wealth of strong imagery to tell a story of a person who has lost his loved one to death and has to suffer the feeling of loneliness and emptiness created by it. Frost uses the setting of a lake surrounded by a forest to convey a feeling of peace and of being alone to the reader. A man is sitting on the edge of the lake, crying out for someone, his echo being his only company. After time, a buck swam across the lake and appeared on the shore and abruptly runs into the brush, away from sight. Although the man only caught a glimpse of the deer for a short moment, it was long enough for him to feel that he was no longer alone, but had something there, even though it was not tangible. The clues given to the reader that someone has passed on are the words "wake" and three lines down, the word "morning." A wake can be many things; one is that it is a vigil that is held in honor of a person who has recently died.

"Morning" can be taken as "mourning" and be seen as Frost grieving for a loved one. One also develops the impression that Frost is mourning a great loss, such as a sould mate, because of the line, "He would cry out on life, that what it wants/ is not its own love back in copy speech/but counter-love." That quote shows the reader that the man was alone, so alone, that he "cried out on life" asking for it to give his lost love back. He doesn't want to love someone who agrees with him wholly, and had no ideas of there own. He wants someone he could talk to and love for who they are, not who they try to be. He had this in his lost love, and now he has no one to share his feelings and emotions with. He was truly alone in the world. "Nothing came of what he cried," until one day when an amazing thing happened, something appeared that made him no longer feel so alone. "Instead of proving human when it neared/As a great buck it powerfully appeared." This "buck" symbolizes his lost love, instead of coming back to him in her tangible form; he realized that she was all

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