Loneliness In Robert Frost's 'Acquainted With The Night'

596 Words2 Pages

The meaning of the poem Acquainted with the Night, is to help people get a better understanding what going through loneliness would be like, and this, is shown by that the narrator is unable to seek help, having no one to care about or for him, and on top of that, is always having the feeling of depression. In the poem, Acquainted with the Night, by Robert Frost, it is shown in the middle that the narrator being unable to get himself help. Where this is shown is in the poem is in lines 5-6 where it says, “I have passed by the watchman on his beat - And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain.”. Here it shows the narrator being unable to communicate with the watchman he passes by. I believe this has to do with him being too depressed to the point where it seems like no one is able to help him, and so he doesn’t even bother with trying to get help. …show more content…

This is firstly shown in the 1st, 2nd, and 4th lines of the poem, where it says, “I have been one acquainted with the night. - I have walked out in the rain. -… I have looked down the saddest city lane.” First off in the quote, where the narrator says he has “been one acquainted with the night.”, it shows the him being supposed used to the night (night in this case means sadness), then where it talks about walking out in the rain and looking down the saddest city lane, it shows that nothing has been easy for him, and that also it is just full of sadness. Where it also mainly shows the author being constantly down is in the last 2 lines of the poem, to which it says, “Proclaimed the time was neither wrong nor right. - I have been one acquainted with the night.” These two lines show that no matter what time it is, “time” to him is always going to be dark (sad) for him. How being constantly down goes into the subject of being lonely is that when you are depressed, you tend to often shut everyone out, making yourself isolated from the rest of

Open Document