A Witness Tree

Creator

Date

1943

Identifier

Brasch PS3511 R94 W57

Publisher

London: Jonathan Cape

Abstract

Robert Frost was troubled by loss, grief, and depression, and his poetry explores questions of existence and human experience. In ‘The Lesson for Today,’ he is engaged in an imaginary discussion with medieval scholar Alcuin of York about whose age is the darkest. He suspects that every age has darkness, some injustice or woe: ‘One age is like another for the soul,’ and earth is ‘a hard place in which to save the soul.’ Prompted by such thoughts and mindful of Alcuin’s epitaph, Frost writes the words for his own headstone: ‘I had a lover’s quarrel with the world.’

Files

Cabinet 16 A Witness Tree.jpg

Citation

Robert Frost, “A Witness Tree,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed November 16, 2024, https://otago.ourheritage.ac.nz/index.php/items/show/8517.