Title: Nothing Gold Can Stay
1Nothing Gold Can Stay
By Robert Frost
2NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY Nature's first green is
gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leaf's a
flower But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides
to leaf. So Eden sank to grief, So dawn goes down
to day. Nothing gold can stay. -Robert Frost
3Nothing Gold Can Stay
- was written by Robert Frost.
- was originally published in Frosts 1923 Volume,
New Hampshire. - is one of Frosts many famous poems alongside
Fire and Ice and The Road Not Taken.
4Nature's first green is gold.
- What is "nature's first green"?
- b) Why is it "gold"? Do you think
- Frost means the color gold?
5Her hardest hue to hold.
a) What is a "hue"? b) Does nature have a hard
time "holding" on to green? ( just think dont
answer, yet)
6Her early leaf's a flower But only so an hour.
- What would an "early leaf" be?
- b) Why is it only that way for an hour? Is it
really - an hourwhat is Frost saying here?
7Then leaf subsides to leaf.
a) What does the word "subsides" mean? b) Knowing
that a leaf bud may look like a flower at first,
but actually turns into a leaf (as we know one
to look like), where could Frost be going with
this poem?
8So Eden sank to grief.
a) What is "Eden"? b) What is meant by the
reference to "grief"?
9NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY Nature's first green is
gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leaf's a
flower But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides
to leaf. So Eden sank to grief, So dawn goes down
to day. Nothing gold can stay.
a) What do the words in red indicate to you? b)
Why do you think Frost chose them?
10So dawn goes down to day. Nothing gold can stay.
- We don't typically think of dawn, or a sunrise,
as "going down", as we would with dusk. Why do
you think Frost worded it like this? - b)What is meant by "nothing gold can stay"?
11NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY Nature's first green is
gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leaf's a
flower But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides
to leaf. So Eden sank to grief, So dawn goes down
to day. Nothing gold can stay. -Robert Frost
Final Question Now that you have a better
understanding of the poem, how could the
messages apply to more than nature? What does it
say about people and life in general?
12Rhythm
- the rhythm of this poem is mostly iambic
trimeter. - Natures first green is gold,
- Her hardest hue to hold.
- Her early leafs a flower
- But only so an hour.
13Rhyme Scheme
- the rhyme scheme in this poem is AABBCCDD its
lines form four pairs of couplets. - Natures first green is gold, A
- Her hardest hue to hold. A
- Her early leafs a flower B
- But only so and hour. B
14Sound Device Alliteration
- Her hardest hue to hold.
- Her early leafs a flower
- So dawn goes down to day.
- In lines two, three and seven the author utilizes
alliteration.
15Sound Device Assonance
- Then leaf subsides to leaf.
- So Eden sank to grief,
- In lines five and six, Frost employs assonance in
the form of the long e sound.
16Figurative Language Allusion
- So Eden sank to grief,
- In the sixth line, Frost is alluding to The
Garden of Eden, a setting of a biblical story.
17Figurative Language Personification
- Natures first green is gold,
- Her hardest hue to hold.
- In these lines of the poem, nature, a non-human
thing, is said to be holding the color gold.
18Figurative Language Metaphor
- An example of a metaphor in this poem is
- Her early leafs a flower
-
- Here, Frost is comparing two alike things the
leaf and the flower.
19Poetic Device Imagery
- So dawn goes down to day.
- Natures first green is gold,
- Frost is appealing to the readers sense of sight.
20Nothing Gold Can Stay
- would be a perfect poem for this textbook because
of its consistent rhythm and rhyme, ideal length,
and numerous examples of poetic devices such as
- Alliteration
- Assonance
- Allusion
- Personification
- Metaphor
- Imagery