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Essay on "Out, Out" |
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This is the first 1,000 characters of 878 words (3.51 pages) in the essay titled "Out, Out"
\ Out, Out\
Out, Out---
Robert Frost’s poem, “Out, Out---”, seems to tell a very descriptive story of a little boy leaving the world after an accident happens to him. Perhaps the name foreshadows the boy’s destiny, which is to leave the world by going “out”. Through this poem, Frost shows that death can occur very suddenly and brutally, even at a young age.
This poem seems to have a tone that goes back and forth between horrific violence, and calm happiness, finally moving to sadness. Frost starts the poem by giving life to a saw, which as we know, is a tool. However, in the poem it is used to represent a killer. The poem immediately goes from a feeling of violence to a feeling of happiness and calmness, when speaking of the saw dust being a sweet scent when the breeze blows across it. The calmness continues through to the next two lines of the mountain ranges in front of the sunset in Vermont, and then quickly shifts back to the “snarling and rattling” of the saw. Towards the middle of the poem, the boy accidentally saws his hand off, and we see a quick shift to the poem’s final tone, which is seen as sadness.
One could read the sawing of the hand to be no accident at all, but rather a suicidal moment in the over-worked boy’s life. The over-worked impression I get comes from the idea that the saw was described as coming to life at the thought of food. The saw was so hunger stricken by the boy working it all day long that it lunged for food just at the word “su...
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Keywords: Out, Out, Frost, death, marriage, robert frosts, horrific violence, quick shift, saw dust, sweet scent, calmness, saws, sadness, poem, hunger, happiness, destiny, poems, laugh, doctors, sunset, vermont, fear
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