NothingGoldCanStayNature'sfirstgreenisgold(a)Herhardesthuetohold.(a)Herearlyleaf'saflower;(b)Butonlysoanhour.(b)Thenleafsubsidestoleaf.(c)SoEdensanktogrief,(c)Sodawngoesdowntoday.(d)Nothinggoldcanstay.(d)Therhym
Frost wrote a lot of short, pithy poems around the time he wrote this one in 1918; "Nothing New" feels as if it belongs to the same family as "Nothing Gold Can Stay" and "Dust of Snow." Like those poems (and like much of Frost's poetry), "Nothing New" feels deeply rooted in ...
Nothing Gold Can Stay Comparison And it also says in the poem “ He was a big man, said the size of his shoes on a pile of broken dishes by the house.”, and the sentence “And Winters cold, says the rags on the window”. If you look back at those two sentences you’ll see ...