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Frost

Text of Poem

Though nothing came that could be heard
Green turned yellow—and from no drouth
In my cornfield; and the last blackbird
Has swallowed his notes and drifted south.

If the change is death, then the color and all
Of blood in the leaves, of smoke in the sky,
Has deceived me with beauty; I heard no call
Of roots to the sap and no answering cry.

It is time, then, for me to walk alone,
To watch leaves fall, while thought runs slow
On the stubborn permanence found in stone,
On the sharp bright virtue of the plow.

First Line
Though nothing came that could be heard
Original Pub Location
Original Publication Date
1930
Original Citation
Poetry 36 (Summer 1930) 320.
Complete Poems
12
Hearst Collections
Word Count
98
Poetic Form
closed
Themes