Analysis Of Nothing Gold Can Stay By Robert Frost

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Sudden Change in Category Youth and Age
The Desire of freedom, the temptation of danger and nostalgia for childhood are examples of twists and turns observed going through life, but it is often at their last moment that people take the time to realize how important their surroundings are and the time passed is precious. Robert Frost poem, “nothing gold can stay” is a writing, underlining the lost in which we are confronted and the incertitude of the future. However, Sylvia Plath’s poem is pointing out more and more the unusual way she sees the world and her own life with the writing “Mirror”. With both of these poems, the reader go through the meaning of life according to both authors. Through disparate personification, imagery, and symbolism, Frost and Plath emphasize their poems themes of human vanity and the fear of aging.
Plath uses an intriguing personification to start off her poem as the mirror speaks as a human saying “I am a silver” and “I have no preconception” (Plath 1). A first person narrator as if the mirror is an object that express thing from an honest observation. The stanza demonstrates the goal of the mirror from the way it described itself. The objectivity of the mirror is even more accentuated in the second line when the poet writes “whatever I see I swallow immediately”. (2) Human qualities are also given to the mirror when it …show more content…

Plath poem also use symbolism and imagery to addresses women in an effective way that the aging process is inescapable and it should be accepted since that is the only way to avoid being in discomfort over something they cannot control. On the other hand, Frost short work evokes a point in life when the golden illusions of youth have faded, but unlike Plath’s poem, is not an explicitly autobiographical. What the reader sees in Frost poem is not a private disillusion but the hard tendency of beauty of life transiting to grief of

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