The Dominance of Nature to Mankind

1038 Words3 Pages

In Robert Frost's "The Need of Being Versed in Country Things," the speaker provides the readers with a juxtaposition between humans and nature. In the poem, a farmhouse was burned down, yet the reactions of humans and of nature to this tragedy are completely opposite. Frost, an avid advocate of nature over society, attempts to show his readers how nature essentially triumphs over mankind through its strength, resiliency to tragedies, and resourcefulness of what seems to be broken down and beyond help. Frost uses personification, anthropomorphizing, and the idea of cycles along with the contrasting responses of nature and man to their disruption to fully convey to the readers nature's dominance over humans. First, Frost's use of personification clearly shows nature's strength over mankind. The speaker says, "the barn opposed across the way/ That would have joined the house in flame/ Had it been the will of the wind" (lines 5-7). These lines essentially attribute the tragedy of the fire and even the salvage of the barn, to the wind, which is given the human characteristic of will or volition. Although the wind is given a human trait, the way the wind uses its will is to help nature: the wind could have burned down the barn as well, to further its display of power, but birds and other animals utilize the barn for shelter and safety; because it acts as a refuge for nature, the wind allows the barn the stay. Even though the wind prevented the barn's destruction, its strength does leave the farm burned down and useless; the wind has the power of nature to direct the fire in whatever way it desires; the way that it uses this power to leave the home of humans, the farm, helpless reveals how weak man is in comparison to nature, as the fa... ... middle of paper ... ...ized by nature: they are used by birds as shelters and resting spots. These examples show that nature heals easily even when its cycles are disrupted as well as makes use of what is around it, revealing its resiliency and strength over mankind. Robert Frost's poem, "The Need of Being Versed in Country Things" expresses to the readers that nature is much more strong, resourceful, and resilient when compared to mankind. As a supporter of nature over society, Frost uses poetic devices to express his favor of nature and his belief of its dominance. He clearly uses personification, anthropomorphizing, and the idea of cycles to fully show how nature overpowers mankind and how its resiliency and strength are key components and attributes that come together to triumph over mankind. Overall, Frost exposes the failure of humans to compare to the dominating aspects of nature.

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