Stopping by woods
Robert Frost
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” like many of Frost's poems,
explores the theme of the individual caught between nature and
civilization. The speaker's location on the border between civilization
and wilderness echoes a common theme throughout American literature. The
speaker is drawn to the beauty and allure of the woods, which represent
nature, but has obligations—“promises to keep”—which draw him away from
nature and back to society and the world of men. The speaker is thus
faced with a choice of whether to give in to the allure of nature, or
remain in the realm of society. Some critics have interpreted the poem
as a meditation on death—the woods represent the allure of death,
perhaps suicide, which the speaker resists in order to return to the
mundane tasks which order daily life.
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