Friday, May 17, 2019

“A Young Birch” by Robert Frost Poetry Analysis Essay

In the poem A Young Birch, Robert freeze takees the futility of existence despite having beauty by and through the use of symbols, structure, and imagery. Although the whipen channelise is beautiful, its life is meaningless and its destruction is unavoidable. The speaker describes the birch trees life, but in the end, the struggles that the birch tree faced were pointless. rhyme establishes the birch trees beauty through the use of symbols in the colour exsanguine. The colour egg white symbolizes beauty and purity. freezing compares the birchs beauty to the suns ability to be bright. Soon entirely white / To double day and cut in one-half the dark (ll 4-5) The speaker comments on the birchs ability, being beautiful, to make the days twice as bright, establishing the blinding beauty of the birch tree.The colour white symbolizes not entirely beauty, but death. Frost uses this symbolisation to establish the inevitability of death. crack its outer sheath / Of baby green and show the white beneath (ll 1-2) Frost uses the speakers comment on the growth of the birch tree to establish the beauty that was always within the tree, but also death, which is apart of every natural living being. Frost establishes the birch trees beauty, but also the inevitable death in his use of symbolisation in the colour white. Frost establishes the futility of existence through the use of symbols. The speaker describes the growth of the birch tree through the comparison of its size to different man-made objects, the cane and the fishing end. The cane and the fishing pole are symbols of the birch trees growth. At first to be no bigger than a cane, / And then no bigger than a fishing pole, (ll 14-15) The cane and the fishing pole also fight back the birch trees inevitable death. These man-made objects are made of wood, which are essentially breathless trees. The speaker describes the present force of death, even in the growing set ups of life.Frost establishes a sense of futility in the birch trees growth. Frost establishes the privation of meaning in the birch trees life. The use of the word ornament represents the birch trees meaningless life, although being beautiful. This symbol establishes that the only purpose of the birchs life is to be a beautiful object and nothing more. To bide its life out as an ornament (ll 22) The speaker comments that the birch trees life is fruitless. Frost establishes the futility of existence in growing and living because of a purposeless existence through his use of symbols.Frost establishes life and growth as futile through his use of structure. The poem, A Young Birch, is change integrity into two sections through the tense that is used, present tense and past tense, establishing that life is only a undersized part of existence and that death is the overpowering force.Frost uses sentence structure and length to represent the birch trees growth. Each sentence, with the exception of the transition sentence and concluding sentence, is slightly larger than the last. As the birch trees growth is described in the poem, the length of the sentences grows too. The sentence lengths reach a climax of 10 lines and it is cut short abruptly, representing the way death cuts life. Frost establishes death as dominating to life through his use of structure. Frost establishes the birch trees imminent death through his use of imagery. The speaker describes the sound of the birch tree breaking out of its outer cover, a stage in its maturity and growth. The birch begins to crack its outer sheath / Of baby green and show the white beneath (ll 1-2) The breaking out of the outer layer of the birch provides a vivid description of the birch trees struggles in life.Frost emphasizes the futility in the struggle of life, as death is unavoidable. Frost establishes the ever-present possibility of being killed in his vivid description of death. The speaker describes those that were killed around the birch and the ease in which the birch itself can die. He spared it from the number of the slain. (ll 13) The image of death emphasizes the loneliness of the birch tree, despite having beauty, and the inevitability of death in the birch tree as well. Frost establishes the vulnerability of living things and the benefit in accepting death through his use of imagery. Frost establishes the dominant nature of death to life and the lack of purpose and meaning in life. He establishes that even in growth, purity, and beauty, death is unavoidable and acceptance of death is beneficial. Frost establishes the imminent nature of death and the futility of existence in A Young Birch through his use of imagery, structure, and symbols.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.