NCdt. McClelland, W.B. 27487 Dr. Huw Osborne ENE 210 10 October 2014 There’s No Escaping Nightmares To be acquainted with the night one must have experienced some travesty that has lead them from the light of the day, to the dark depression of the night. Robert Frost’s transition was brought forth by the struggles in his personal life. In the early 1900’s after dropping out of university, Frost bought a house in the countryside of Derry, New Hampshire. The family struggled with money constraints…
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Taking the time to walk alone at night, to clear a person's head is a peaceful thing to do. And this nightly stroll goes a long way in helping with the daily troubles that plagues the mind. But for others, the nightly walk is the time that they can feel most vulnerable, which can cause them to face whatever demons they may have. While others can view the night as a dark, depressing time, Robert Frost poem “Acquainted with the Night” shows that it also can be a time where people can reflect on themselves…
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Loneliness in “Acquainted with the Night” The poem “Acquainted with the Night” by Robert Frost is the story of a lonely wanderer in his state of depression. Frost’s use of symbolism complements the somber tone and terza rima rhyme scheme to vividly depict how the speaker views the world around him in his state of mind. The reader peers into the speaker’s mind as he sinks further into his depression. His deep depression overcomes him so much that, even in the crowded city streets, the people around…
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Both poems 419 by Emily Dickinson and Acquainted with the Night by Robert Frost use imagery of darkness and night to create a sense of the narrator being alone, to comment on the uncertainty of life, but they differ in that Dickinson’s poem sees darkness as an inevitable condition of life, while Frost reflects more human emotional distress. Both poems use darkness imagery of character being alone in the world. In Dickinson’s poem that darkness comes when “the neighborhood holds the lamp to witness…
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Reagan Glanz Kohlmeier AP Lit January 12th, 2017 Poetry Response #14 In the poem, “Acquainted with the Night” the author, Robert Frost uses a variation of rhyme scheme and structure to change the tone and meaning of the poem. It’s consistent structure and rhyme scheme up until the last stanza helps the poem retain one tone throughout, as both stay the same until the very end. In addition to this the meter, emphasizing different sections throughout the poem tells you which parts are the most important…
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A shout in the night, interrupted, never to be heard from again. In Robert Frost’s poem “Acquainted With the Night”, the man heard this while walking the streets at night. The author uses personification to show how lonely the man is, and alliteration to put emphasis on his seclusion. The author uses personification to evoke a feeling of loneliness. In line four he says, “I have looked down the saddest city lane.” He was looking for someone to talk to but found no one. In lines twelve and thirteen…
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Through the poems “We Grow Accustomed to the Night” by Emily Dickinson and “Acquainted with the Night” by Robert Frost, the reader is shown how significant darkness are to both of the poems themes. Yet despite both having the same significance, through point of view, diction and structure, the tones of both pieces differ. The first instance of how the tones are different is through the point of views used in each poem. In Dickinson’s poem second person is used. This choice makes the poem more open…
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the streets was meant for him. The narrator continues to walk through the night aimlessly and has become acquainted with the night to the point where he is used to it. This hints that perhaps this has become a regular encounter with the night because he has nowhere else to go. The underlining fact that is not addressed as much, is how the narrator emphasizes at the first and last line, that he has been acquainted with the night. The theme of depression being personified is shown because the narrator…
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poem themselves. His morals can be found in the poems, “The Road Not Taken,” “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” “Out, Out,” and “Acquainted with the Night.” Robert Frost’s poetry uses different themes to create morals which readers will use in daily life. “He is fairly taciturn about what happens to us after death, partly because he finds so…
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Caitlin Smith P.6 AP Eng. “We grow accustomed to the Dark”, by Emily Dickinson and,” Acquainted with the Night”, by Robert Frost are two very different and similar poems. Both having to do being stuck in the Dark even if their experiences have been different. They both talk about how from their point of views and use of imagery, and structure form shaped their experiences in the Darkness, or Night. From Emily Dickinson’s point of view in her poem it seems more like she’s…
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