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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
POD OF THE MILKWEED, by ROBERT FROST Poem Explanation Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Calling all butterflies from every race Last Line: Should come to nothing must be fairly faced Subject(s): Milkweed | |||
Calling all butterflies from every race From source unknown but no special place They ever will return to all their lives, Because unlike the bees they have no hives The milkweed brings up to my very door The theme of wanton waste in peace and war As it has never been to me before. And so it seems a flower's coming out That should if not be talked then sung about. The countless wings that from the infinite Make such a noiseless tumult over it Do no doubt with their color compensate For what the drab weed lacks of the ornate. For drab it is its fondest must admit. And yes, although it is a flower that flows With milk and honey, it is bitter milk, As anyone who ever broke its stem And dared to taste the wound a little knows. It tastes as if it might be opiate. But whatsoever else it may secrete, Its flowers distilled honey is so sweet It makes the butterflies intemperate. There is no slumber in its juice for them One knocks another off from where he clings. They knock the dyestuff off each other's wings- With thirst on hunger to the point of lust. They raise in their intemperance a cloud Of mingled butterfly and flower dust That hangs perceptibly above the scene. In being sweet to these ephemerals The sober weed has managed to contrive In our three hundred days and sixty-five One day too sweet for beings to survive. Many shall come away as struggle-worn And spent and dusted off of their regalia, To which at daybreak they were freshly born, As after one-of-them's proverbial failure From having beaten all day long in vain Against the wrong side of a windowpane. But waste was of the essence of the scheme. And all the good they did for man or god To all those flowers they passionately trod Was leave as their posterity one pod With an inheritance of restless dream. He hangs on upside down with talon feet In an inquisitive position odd As any Guatemalan parakeet. Something eludes him. Is it food to eat? Or some dim secret of the good of waste? He almost has it in his talon clutch. Where have those flowers and butterflies all gone That science may have staked the future on? He seems to say the reason why so much Should come to nothing must be fairly faced. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A DREAM OF JULIUS CAESAR by ROBERT FROST A PECK OF GOLD by ROBERT FROST A STEEPLE ON THE HOUSE by ROBERT FROST A SUMMER'S GARDEN by ROBERT FROST A WINTER'S NIGHT by ROBERT FROST AMERICA IS HARD TO SEE by ROBERT FROST AN UNSTAMPED LETTER IN OUR RURAL LETTER BOX by ROBERT FROST |
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