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A Witness Tree

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1942 collection of poems by Robert Frost
A Witness Tree
AuthorRobert Frost
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry
PublisherHenry Holt and Company
Publication date
1942
Publication placeU.S.
Pages68
AwardsPulitzer Prize for Poetry (1943)

A Witness Tree is a poetry collection byRobert Frost, most of which are short lyric, first published in 1942 byHenry Holt and Company in New York. The collection was awarded thePulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1943.

Background

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This collection was published after several unfortunate tragedies had occurred in Frost's personal life, including his daughter Marjorie's death in 1934, his wife's death in 1938, and his son Carol's suicide in 1940. Despite these losses, Frost continued to work on his poetry and eventually fell in love with his secretary Kay Marrison, who became the primary inspiration of the love poems in this collection. This collection is the last of Frost's books that demonstrates the seamless lyric quality of his earlier poems. The most popular poem of this volume is "The Gift Outright", which was recited at thepresidential inauguration of John F. Kennedy in 1961.[1]The book is 42 poems in length, and it is broken into five sections "One or Two," "Two or More," "Time Out," "Quantula," and "Over Back." In the book, Frost is interested in race, mortality, religion, science, and philosophy. The imagery is drawn from the natural world and from the ordinary, as is the case in "All Revelation," in which Frost demonstrates the revelation inside a head-tilt ("a head thrusts" (14)). Something small, a rock, a leaf, a head-tilt, inspires epiphanic turns in the poems, which often utilize the form and rhyme of a sonnet. For example, three of the five sections begin with a sonnet. Another form Frost uses is the heroic couplet, which is often down-played through the use of enjambment, understatement, and conversational language. It gives an ironic, satirical tone to many of the voices in the collection. Frost uses racist language, including racial slurs and white supremacist ideology, in the book.

Contents

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  • Beech9
  • Sycamore9

ONE OR TWO

  • 1The Silken Tent13
  • 2All Revelation14
  • 3Happiness Makes Up in Height for What It Lacks in Length15
  • 4Come In16
  • 5I Could Give All to Time17
  • 6Carpe Diem18
  • 7The Wind and the Rain20
  • 8The Most of It23
  • 9Never Again Would Birds’ Song Be the Same24
  • 10The Subverted Flower25
  • 11Wilful Homing28
  • 12A Cloud Shadow29
  • 13The Quest of the Purple-Fringed30
  • 14The Discovery of the Madeiras32

TWO OR MORE

  • 1The Gift Outright41
  • 2Triple Bronze42
  • 3Our Hold on the Planet43
  • 4To a Young Wretch (Boethian)44
  • 5The Lesson for Today46

TIME OUT

  • 1Time Out55
  • 2To a Moth Seen in Winter56
  • 3A Considerable Speck (Microscopic)57
  • 4The Lost Follower59
  • 5November61
  • 6The Rabbit Hunter62
  • 7A Loose Mountain (Telescopic)63
  • 8It Is Almost the Year Two Thousand64

QUANTULA

  • 1In a Poem67
  • 2On Our Sympathy with the Under Dog68
  • 3A Question69
  • 4Boeotian70
  • 5The Secret Sits71
  • 6An Equalizer72
  • 7A Semi-Revolution73
  • 8Assurance74
  • 9An Answer75

OVER BACK

  • 1Trespass79
  • 2A Nature Note80
  • 3Of the Stones of the Place81
  • 4Not of School Age82
  • 5A Serious Step Lightly Taken84
  • 6The Literate Farmer and thePlanet Venus86

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Pulitzer Prize winners". Retrieved29 July 2013.

External links

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