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Robert FrostA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Poets want to understand the world; scientists want to measure it. The humanities and the sciences have long been at odds on how to define the cosmos, as artists call it, or the universe, as scientists call it. As a philosophical poem, “West-Running Brook” explores the reality of a universe that continually frustrates any scientist’s efforts to define it and at the same time renders ironic any artist’s efforts to understand it. Everything about the poem—the stream, the couple, the sun, the world the husband comments upon—everything reveals a stubborn contrariness.
The stream runs west although it is surrounded by “normal” streams that flow logically eastward to the nearby ocean. The woman is romantic, deeply spiritual, imaginative, given to fanciful interpretations of the world around her, not content to allow it to be defined only by the senses; her husband is practical, logical, immersed in the immediate world and what observation of it can reveal, unwilling to trust interpretations of that verifiable world. The world that the husband creates during his lengthy lecture to his wife reveals that, for him, the entire cosmos is held in tension between what the heart yearns to be true and what the intellect understands is true.
By Robert Frost
Acquainted with the Night
Robert Frost
After Apple-Picking
Robert Frost
A Time To Talk
Robert Frost
Birches
Robert Frost
Dust of Snow
Robert Frost
Fire and Ice
Robert Frost
Mending Wall
Robert Frost
Nothing Gold Can Stay
Robert Frost
October
Robert Frost
Once by the Pacific
Robert Frost
Out, Out—
Robert Frost
Putting in the Seed
Robert Frost
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Robert Frost
The Death of the Hired Man
Robert Frost
The Gift Outright
Robert Frost
The Road Not Taken
Robert Frost