Criticism > Poetry > Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, Robert Frost - Richard J. Gray (essay date 1990)
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, Robert Frost - Richard J. Gray (essay date 1990)
Richard J. Gray (essay date 1990)
SOURCE: Gray, Richard J. “In Search of a Past: The Fugitive Movement and the Major Traditionalists.” In American Poetry of the Twentieth Century, pp. 101–52. New York: Longman, 1990.
[In the following excerpted essay, Gray discusses the seeming lack of resolution in the closing lines of “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.”]
The duality of the narrator's response to the woods [in “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”] is caught in the contrast between the relaxed, conversational idiom of the first three lines (note the gentle emphasis given to ‘think’, the briskly colloquial ‘though’) and the dreamlike descriptive detail and hypnotic verbal music (‘watch … woods’, ‘his … fill … with’) of the last. Clearing and wilderness, law and freedom, civilization and nature, fact and dream: these oppositions reverberate throughout American writing. And they are registered here...
[The entire page is 754 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John T. Ogilvie (essay date 1959)
- Lawrance Thompson (essay date 1970)
- Samuel Coale (essay date 1978)
- Donald J. Greiner (essay date 1978)
- Frank Bernhard (essay date 1982)
- Donald J. Greiner (essay date 1982)
- Philip L. Gerber (essay date 1982)
- James G. Hepburn (essay date 1984)
- Anne Mack and J. J. Rome (essay date 1989)
- Leni R. Garcia (essay date 1990)
- Richard J. Gray (essay date 1990)
- Guy Rotella (essay date 1991)
- Jeffrey Meyers (essay date 1996)
- Jhan Hochman (essay date 1997)
- Karen L. Kilcup (essay date 1998)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
