Robert B. Frost's "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" is about...

Robert Frost reading his poem:

Good stuff.

For more clues, consult Robert’s brother Jack.

You’re all way off base about this poem. It’s a metaphor for modern urban living. The wintry dark is code for the isolation and alienation of society in a modern, crowded city. The “narrator” is a street-walker, freezing literally and metaphorical as disinterested consumers of greater means take advantage of her. The horse, symbolically, is her pimp.

And how about the obvious allusion to Queer Theory in the horse must think it queer to stop without a farmhouse near? In what sense is the horse coming to a radical reconceptualization of sex roles with his/her “queer” thoughts?

I am now certain that the streetwalker is, in fact, transgendered.

Also it fits When The Saints go Marching In.

Can they be sung to “The Yellow Rose of Texas”?

No they can’t.

But . . . another esteemed American poet’s poems can . . . ::rolleyes:

Thanks for that link. I’ve always wondered about how Robert Frost imagined those first two syllables being read. Whether a strong spondee to mark the beginning of the poem before it lulls us into an iambic trance, or whether it was iambic all the way from the first. It seems to me that he did imagine those first two syllables as stressed. A minor point, but something I’ve been curious about (and my first post in this thread reflects my uncertainty about this.)