Robert Frost reads Birches

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 109

  • @xfathersgunx
    @xfathersgunx 3 года назад +39

    An old community college professor of mine once read this poem aloud to our half-attentive class. I could tell that it was something special by how he gripped the page and focused on the text. Usually, his behavior betrayed him as a bit old and maybe senile, but in this moment he was fully engaged and I remember how his voice tightened as the poem's emotion intensified in the last couple stanzas. I consider this reading as the beginning of my love of poetry, and I've since told him as much. There were 3 or 4 other students (thank God) who seemed equally as pulled into the moment as myself, while the rest of the class worked at homework for other courses or whispered amongst themselves.

    • @tatonkapeach
      @tatonkapeach 2 года назад +2

      I love the way you described this moment. I felt like I shared it with you. ❤️

    • @notjohnkeats2787
      @notjohnkeats2787 2 года назад

      Inspiring!

    • @kaelyng.427
      @kaelyng.427 2 года назад

      @@notjohnkeats2787I completely agree with this, it was truly an inspiration 🙏🏻

  • @ExclusivelyLindsPro
    @ExclusivelyLindsPro 8 лет назад +73

    Thank you so much for putting this on RUclips. What an honor and a joy and a blessing to be able to hear Robert frosts voice reading his own work

  • @burlingtonpark4136
    @burlingtonpark4136 9 лет назад +28

    this poem is so tenderhearted and perfect. Thank you for letting us hear Mr. Frost read it.

  • @locofoco123
    @locofoco123 13 лет назад +8

    One of my favorite poems. As a young fellow in rural Illinois, I was a swinger of birches.This poem touches me deeply. . Life lessons taught and appreciated. It has served me well in my later years. Thank you Robert Frost.

  • @loriallen7067
    @loriallen7067 5 лет назад +7

    Robert Frost...Quintessential New England, yet accessible to the whole world... Unspeakable perfection ....

  • @bethwahlig5098
    @bethwahlig5098 8 лет назад +11

    If you ever walk on the Robert Frost Trail in Vermont you will understand the strength of the birch trees. Thank you so much for Robert Frost and his poetry. No poet has ever written about the nature of America and what you see.

  • @PiecesOfMyAfricanSoul
    @PiecesOfMyAfricanSoul 5 лет назад +19

    I never get tired of listening to Frost. I visited his farm in New England a month ago, saw the place that inspired him to write for 11 years.

    • @MuckPack
      @MuckPack Год назад

      What a wonderful trip to make!

  • @cbswims401
    @cbswims401 2 года назад +3

    I love Frost's voice!!!!!

  • @ShakespeareCafe
    @ShakespeareCafe 5 лет назад +9

    If you’re even considering going to Mars, listen to this poem first: “Earth’s the right place for love. I don’t know where it’s likely to go better” I downloaded this reading from Napster 20 years ago and transferred among lines of laptops and computers. It’s an old friend

  • @fe12rrps
    @fe12rrps 6 лет назад +12

    For me, this poem is about life and how we experience weariness and the freedom from weariness. It’s not by accident that we experience life free of worry and anxiety at two periods in life: during childhood and late in life during our remembrance of youth.

  • @JoeLanctot1
    @JoeLanctot1 7 лет назад +3

    One of my favorites from him, and even better with him reciting it.

  • @tranettaelizabethfranklin8150
    @tranettaelizabethfranklin8150 7 лет назад +11

    Still enough to make cry.

    • @johntatum1951
      @johntatum1951 6 лет назад +4

      Yep....touched me this time...and probably will again when I reread it...as I am likely to do...one could do worse than be a reader of "Birches"

    • @rafasupreme1
      @rafasupreme1 6 лет назад +1

      Tranetta Elizabeth Franklin
      The south California public public school system, although plagued with inequality, did have a couple golden moments . As a first generation Mexican-American, some of illegal farms workers, I was left moth mr.frosts words stuck to my little head back when I first read them and still, I read them as if I’d just come across them for the first time.

    • @JerseyMiller
      @JerseyMiller 6 лет назад

      Yes

  • @caramason56
    @caramason56 2 года назад +1

    Thank you 😊❤️☀️A most brilliant poet

  • @larryaders5271
    @larryaders5271 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for this 👏 👏 poem and reading
    Love Robert Frost poems
    .They give my heart ❤ great comfort.

  • @JerseyMiller
    @JerseyMiller 6 лет назад +8

    My mantra... through hard times.

  • @yl9699
    @yl9699 Год назад +1

    It has a completely different ring to the poem when read by the poet himself. Thank you, Robert Frost, for this beautiful masterpiece.

  • @laurabutterfield2693
    @laurabutterfield2693 5 лет назад +4

    I quoted this poem for my senior year book quote. "One could do worse than be a swinger of Birches."

  • @arrourasanti2
    @arrourasanti2 12 лет назад +17

    "One could do worse than be a swinger of birches."
    Shivers, I got pure shivers as he said that.

    • @monukeys1105
      @monukeys1105 3 года назад +2

      Hey I really didn't understand this sentence. Can you explain ? I searched for it everywhere but didn't get it

    • @luna07430
      @luna07430 2 года назад

      @@monukeys1105 umm , It can have plenty of explanation, u still up for one?

    • @monukeys1105
      @monukeys1105 2 года назад

      @@luna07430 i still dont understand this sentence xD

    • @luna07430
      @luna07430 2 года назад

      @@monukeys1105 It simply means , One can just die instead of wandering to and fro memory lanes. As you may already know the swinging of birches most probably refers to author's childhood where he spent all his happy times , Care free ones. His adult life's struggles are more likely ice-storms. That swinging most probably represents the innocence of childhood. Hence , “One could do worse than be swinger of birches” can just simply mean , One can just be caught by the ice storm and pass away. This is my explanation.

    • @monukeys1105
      @monukeys1105 2 года назад +1

      @@luna07430 oh i now understand it . Thankyou so much for taking time to explain ❤️😁

  • @ryanjavierortega8513
    @ryanjavierortega8513 9 лет назад +36

    Damn, this is is an amazing Poem.

    • @kabirrubaiyat
      @kabirrubaiyat 7 лет назад

      Ryan Ortega one of my favorites..❤️🌷

  • @davidjohnson-fo7ze
    @davidjohnson-fo7ze 7 лет назад +33

    By Robert Frost When I see birches bend to left and right
    Across the lines of straighter darker trees,
    I like to think some boy's been swinging them.
    But swinging doesn't bend them down to stay
    As ice-storms do. Often you must have seen them
    Loaded with ice a sunny winter morning
    After a rain. They click upon themselves
    As the breeze rises, and turn many-colored
    As the stir cracks and crazes their enamel.
    Soon the sun's warmth makes them shed crystal shells
    Shattering and avalanching on the snow-crust-
    Such heaps of broken glass to sweep away
    You'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen.
    They are dragged to the withered bracken by the load,
    And they seem not to break; though once they are bowed
    So low for long, they never right themselves:
    You may see their trunks arching in the woods
    Years afterwards, trailing their leaves on the ground
    Like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair
    Before them over their heads to dry in the sun.
    But I was going to say when Truth broke in
    With all her matter-of-fact about the ice-storm
    I should prefer to have some boy bend them
    As he went out and in to fetch the cows-
    Some boy too far from town to learn baseball,
    Whose only play was what he found himself,
    Summer or winter, and could play alone.
    One by one he subdued his father's trees
    By riding them down over and over again
    Until he took the stiffness out of them,
    And not one but hung limp, not one was left
    For him to conquer. He learned all there was
    To learn about not launching out too soon
    And so not carrying the tree away
    Clear to the ground. He always kept his poise
    To the top branches, climbing carefully
    With the same pains you use to fill a cup
    Up to the brim, and even above the brim.
    Then he flung outward, feet first, with a swish,
    Kicking his way down through the air to the ground.
    So was I once myself a swinger of birches.
    And so I dream of going back to be.
    It's when I'm weary of considerations,
    And life is too much like a pathless wood
    Where your face burns and tickles with the cobwebs
    Broken across it, and one eye is weeping
    From a twig's having lashed across it open.
    I'd like to get away from earth awhile
    And then come back to it and begin over.
    May no fate willfully misunderstand me
    And half grant what I wish and snatch me away
    Not to return. Earth's the right place for love:
    I don't know where it's likely to go better.
    I'd like to go by climbing a birch tree,
    And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk
    Toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more,
    But dipped its top and set me down again.
    That would be good both going and coming back.
    One could do worse than be a swinger of birches.
    Source: The Poetry of Robert Frost (1969)

  • @sansumida
    @sansumida 2 года назад

    One of my all time favourite poems, love his seemingly simple style, expressing such tender thoughts

  • @khalid749
    @khalid749 8 лет назад +6

    Wow. I haven't the adequate words, in my opinion, to describe how beautifully this man wrote. I nearly cried by the end of this.

  • @marisolandchris
    @marisolandchris 3 года назад

    Just Beautiful. I lived in Haverhill, Ma years ago and can still smell the woods.

  • @Tennishead21
    @Tennishead21 13 лет назад +2

    What a wonderful poem, one of Frost's best I think.

  • @petros2187
    @petros2187 Год назад

    This is a masterpiece! Thank you Mr Frost! ❤❤

  • @Wanderingdayo
    @Wanderingdayo 3 года назад +1

    Love his poetry and voice...

  • @aahelibose3808
    @aahelibose3808 2 года назад +2

    This is beautiful ❤️

  • @hafeez_kkdv
    @hafeez_kkdv 7 лет назад +7

    still remember the English course book of 9th standard of Kerala syllabus during 2005-06 ... beautiful poem ..

  • @YouMakeMeFaceplam666
    @YouMakeMeFaceplam666 11 лет назад +29

    Actually this poem is about freedom and creativity, how when you grow older the creativity is worn out of you. Swinging on birches is like the creative process, you leave earth for a few moments, just you and your thoughts, away from the conventional and free but you always come back to reality. Frost is expressing fear is having to leave reality for good but simultaneously he reminisces on his free, creative days where he "swung on birches".

    • @DontarrestmePLZ
      @DontarrestmePLZ 5 лет назад +5

      Did he tell you that?

    • @joytorrey314
      @joytorrey314 4 года назад

      is it though

    • @naztubes
      @naztubes 4 года назад +1

      All subjective my friend

    • @verified139
      @verified139 3 года назад +2

      Whenever I hear someone say - this is what this song is about, or - this is what this poem is about, the thought occurs to me that I hope I'm never so absolute that I have to tell others what they should feel from poetic writing.

    • @littlebrookreader949
      @littlebrookreader949 2 года назад

      “One could do worse than be a swinger of birches.” Priceless. True.

  • @ElisabethFollman
    @ElisabethFollman 11 лет назад +3

    New favorite poem.

  • @renelevaillant3766
    @renelevaillant3766 6 лет назад +1

    Wonderful thinking and a beautiful voice!

  • @clive7092
    @clive7092 8 месяцев назад

    "I'd like to get away from Earth a while..." omg yes please.

  • @littlebrookreader949
    @littlebrookreader949 2 года назад +1

    W O N D E R F U L .
    J U S T W O ND E R F U L.
    ❤️❤️❤️

  • @avramsachs6230
    @avramsachs6230 5 лет назад

    Great channel. Thanks.

  • @markosf09
    @markosf09 11 лет назад +2

    I just heard this for the first time rite now... when I was a kid growing up, there was a birch tree in the front yard that I used to hang and lie on. (or is it lay?)
    and I love frost. but just heard this for the first time

  • @hannsvernor5125
    @hannsvernor5125 9 лет назад +10

    my friend said he doesn't "get " poetry. I said, " just check out anything by Robert Frost"

  • @SusanMeyer-rw6hz
    @SusanMeyer-rw6hz 10 месяцев назад

    I EMPHASIZE ON THE WORD ICE.Thats an understatement the words ice storm good god good jesus help us all thats good

  • @alaskannarwhal
    @alaskannarwhal 8 лет назад +14

    It's been so long since @Nick Cage commented, so I can't directly upvote him, but I wanted to keep his comment near the top cuz I freaking appreciated reading it--"Nick Cage: Actually this poem is about freedom and creativity, how when you grow older the creativity is worn out of you. Swinging on birches is like the creative process, you leave Earth for a few moments, just you and your thoughts, away from the conventional and free but you always come back to reality. Frost is expressing fear is having to leave reality for good but silmultaneously he reminisces on his free, creative days where he "swung on birches."'

    • @GracieDoll
      @GracieDoll 4 года назад

      @@Dasein2005 no one asked for your opinion either but here you are! Their response was beautiful 😀

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад

    We have known the days.. .

  • @goalsformary
    @goalsformary 14 лет назад

    my favorite poem.

  • @bryantposs8079
    @bryantposs8079 10 лет назад +2

    Favorite poem, "Prufrock" comes close.

    • @kabirrubaiyat
      @kabirrubaiyat 7 лет назад +1

      Bryant Poss 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,' by T.S Eliot. Agreed! One of my favorites too...☺️

  • @amandatrayes5272
    @amandatrayes5272 5 лет назад

    America's greatest poet.

  • @pbjb3854
    @pbjb3854 10 лет назад

    Luv this man!

  • @natalya6091
    @natalya6091 4 года назад

    Thank you.Loved it.🇷🇺

  • @gurarpitkaur4275
    @gurarpitkaur4275 2 года назад

    what i like to think about the first two parts of the poem is that when a person has been soo strained stressed anxious and put all of this on their self not letting themself go not letting themslf have peace not having mercy on oneself and just relax for a bit... however when they realize this and actually let themself be what they wanna be let that angry tension on oneself let go? just allow themself to be? they see their is a scar they see theya re bent and that frost they let themselves covered with is the reason of it and now they just can't straighten up they are bent in ways where the path to healing has long been cross not to be returned too... and i hope no one feel's this ever. it's just to cruel to be hard upon oneself and not just one doing it to themself no! but the other people treating another with such cruelty knowing or unkowing dosen't matter the damage has been done unable to repair.... the line i am refrering here are 00:10 to 00:50 :
    "But swinging doesn’t bend them down to stay
    As ice-storms do. Often you must have seen them
    Loaded with ice a sunny winter morning
    After a rain. They click upon themselves
    As the breeze rises, and turn many-colored
    As the stir cracks and crazes their enamel.
    Soon the sun’s warmth makes them shed crystal shells
    Shattering and avalanching on the snow-crust-
    Such heaps of broken glass to sweep away
    You'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen.
    They are dragged to the withered bracken by the load,
    And they seem not to break; though once they are bowed
    So low for long, they never right themselves:"

  • @cghorse66
    @cghorse66 11 лет назад

    I love frost

  • @elreichda
    @elreichda 12 лет назад +2

    One could do worse than be a swinger of Truffula trees.

  • @otakoh
    @otakoh Год назад

    0:00
    0:28
    Camilly
    0:28
    1:01
    Evillyn
    1:01
    1:22
    Ana Clara Rodrigues
    1:22
    1:52
    yoná
    1:52
    2:27
    Ana Clara Sousa.

  • @jonathanbisono5520
    @jonathanbisono5520 7 лет назад

    That just went south real quick.

  • @tamroluluromtakankav
    @tamroluluromtakankav 6 лет назад +2

    what could '"One could do worse than be a swinger of birches" mean ? such a beautiful poem !

    • @bobmcgahey1280
      @bobmcgahey1280 5 лет назад +4

      Frost was a good classicist he knew his Greek and his Iliad. Homer has "tags" that fill out the line keep the metre and describe the hero eg he las line "Such was the burial of Hektor "breaker of horses" (hippodamoio) Frost wants us to see something more than play in swinging on birches --something heroic

  • @clive7092
    @clive7092 8 месяцев назад

    "I was once a swinger..." - You tell it how it was Robert! 😊 Only joking - magnificent poetry.

  • @kel3244
    @kel3244 9 лет назад

    this is family incarnate

  • @jeffgraham91
    @jeffgraham91 13 лет назад +1

    @YawnGod You try writing in Blank Verse and see how it goes.

  • @donkiko3000
    @donkiko3000 12 лет назад

    it actually is

  • @epmattson
    @epmattson 5 лет назад

    Take the poetry walk at the Frost Place in Franconia, NH! Pause the video to read each poem along the way. ruclips.net/video/1SBjJZ0UDh4/видео.html

  • @skbiswas
    @skbiswas 13 лет назад

    At was pretty good.

  • @markosf09
    @markosf09 11 лет назад

    by there I meant new england

  • @Joel-oe7ud
    @Joel-oe7ud 5 лет назад +2

    He wishes to be younger and go back to swinging birches. This poem makes me contemplate that sooner or later we all are gonna grow old and just like him, wish that we regain our youth.

  • @steffanralphdelpiano
    @steffanralphdelpiano 13 лет назад

    @brandonjrowe If you read Robert Frost for masterbatory images I'd hate to hear what you think about when you read Dr. Seuss.

  • @markosf09
    @markosf09 11 лет назад

    wow

  • @YawnGod
    @YawnGod 13 лет назад

    @jeffgraham91 You know, my two lines and this comment of yours make a rather tasteful poem. Which is ironic, since it's more than much of what Frost had ever written.
    Lulzy.

  • @ashtondacosta1951
    @ashtondacosta1951 3 года назад +1

    Nicole

  • @YawnGod
    @YawnGod 13 лет назад

    @MrJay50jay The decimal system is pretty overrated, don't you think?

  • @bhatsaima1658
    @bhatsaima1658 6 лет назад

    where is its analysis by the speaker himself?

  • @sannidhyachakraborty
    @sannidhyachakraborty Год назад

    No birches?

  • @eviefromthemummy
    @eviefromthemummy 3 года назад +1

    He sounds like he is trying to get it over with as fast as possible

  • @gibsona9
    @gibsona9 13 лет назад

    stephanralph, you definitely need to get out more often....

  • @BackRoadsWine
    @BackRoadsWine 3 года назад

    ayup

  • @jeffgraham91
    @jeffgraham91 13 лет назад +3

    Love the poem, but I don't particularly like Frost's reading of it. Haha, am I allowed to do that? It's his poem after all..
    Hm...

    • @jenniebryant2644
      @jenniebryant2644 3 года назад

      Haha I was thinking the same. I do enjoy it; I like to hear his voice, but he kind of sounds like he’s read it too many times. I came here trying to decide if I’d have him read it to my class or read it myself; I think I’ll read it myself.

  • @YawnGod
    @YawnGod 13 лет назад +2

    This isn't poetry.
    This is prose.

  • @MrJay50jay
    @MrJay50jay 13 лет назад

    @YawnGod 1/10 because you got me to respond.

  • @gatogreensleeves
    @gatogreensleeves 9 лет назад +4

    'Sup Birches? (someone had to say it ;-) wordplay intended, misogyny not). Someone suggested that this might be about masturbation and I scoffed, but then read it again in that light... and thought, "woah." Could it be? That would be wild if so. Maybe it's a coincidence, but there are several parts that could fit the extended metaphor.

  • @gingyik
    @gingyik 4 года назад

    who had to do this for school 🤢🤢🤢🤢

  • @sounavchaudhuri4057
    @sounavchaudhuri4057 3 года назад

    AFTER APPLE-PICKING
    ANNOTATIONS
    L. 7. Essence of winter sleep-the environment is full of the intoxicating scent of apples. L. 9. I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight-as the apple-picker begins to drowse away, the familiar and the common begins to assume the dimensions of unfamiliarity and strangeness. He cannot rub or wipe off this film of strangeness from his eyes. L. 11. I skimmed this morning from the drinking trough--the ice which he had collected in the morning from the surface of drinking water in a trough, which is a long narrow vessel for watering animals. L. 12. Hoary grass-grass covered with frost or snow. In his drowsy haze, things appear new, strange and unfamiliar as they had appeared to him when he looked at them through the ice he had collected that morning. L. 20. Fleck of russet- every bit or spot of reddish brown colour on the apples. L. 21. Instep arch-the prominent upper part of the human foot near its junction with the leg. L. 34. Spiked with stubble--pierced or bruised with some stubble, still standing in the field. L. 38. Whatever sleep it is-a touch of mystery is imparted to the entire aura. The apple-picker is not sure whether his sleep is the ordinary sleep of human beings, or the long winter hibernation of creatures of nature like the woodchuck.
    (B) EXPLANATIONS WITH CRITICAL COMMENTS
    L1. 1-5 My long....some bough-The dramatic setting and initial commitment in tone is remarkable. “Pre-sleep and sleepy reminiscence of the day, condition all that is said and the speaker's first words show what form his dreamy talk will take.".
    L. 6. But I am....apple-picking now-The apple-picker is thoroughly tired and bored with apple picking. Fatigue and boredom gas he decides that he will have nothing to do with apple-picking.
    L. 7. Essence of winter sleep-The entire atmosphere is laden with sleepiness.
    L. 18. Magnified apples-Though the apple-picker is seeing the apples against the sky with daylight accuracy and clarity, they appear to be magnified and enlarged. For him, they stand out as symbols for great dream like spheres.
    L. 19. Stem end and blossom end-This repetitious way of describing the apples over and over again helps in blurring the precise details and giving the whole set up a metaphoric dimension.
    L. 30. There were....to touch- This line instantly brings to mind the line in The Daffodils- 'Ten thousand saw I at a glance.'
    L. 40-41. The wood chuck......long sleep-This is the closing metaphor of the poem, and as such, it adds to the strangeness of 'winter sleep' by bringing in the non-human death-like sleep of hibernation.
    L. 42. Or just some human sleep-“The poem is absorbed with states between not only of winter sleep, but of all similar areas where real and unreal appear and disappear. After Apple-Picking illustrates exactly Santayana's remark, that the artist is a person consenting to dream of reality. The consent in this instance is implied in the perfection of the form."
    EXPLANATIONS WITH REFERENCE TO CONTEXT
    L. 7-12. Essence of winter....hoary grass-- In these lines there is a very fine and vivid description of the atmosphere in the orchard. This description by the apple-picker gives us the very touch, the very feel of the atmosphere in the orchard. This description is sensuous and becomes alive because the words he chooses are just apt for the description and create an impression of drowsiness. Untermeyer rightly comments that it is a vivid memory of experience that the reader absorbs it physically. I feel it is not a memory of an experience it is much more-in this description the apple-picker is reliving the experience. The smell of the apples is too overpowering for him. He also senses the quaintness of the world as it appears to the exhausted worker. The scent of apples in this poem reminds us of a similar expression "drowsed with the fume of poppies" in Keats's Ode to Autumn. The apple-picker feels himself pervaded with an oppressive feeling of drowsiness. Here again we can trace a similarity between this drowsy sleepiness and the drowsy numbness of Keats' Ode to Autumn. The entire landscape and the atmosphere around him assumes a mysterious halo and is misted by over with a rare quality of strangeness. These qualities transform the scene completely and the apple-picker can neither get rid of quality nor can he comprehend the transformed world. As he unknowingly steps into the realms of this world of sleepiness the narrative of the about the ice skimmed from the trough mingles gradually with the dream the time references of the tenses become fused and confused. Brown comments on the rhythm and images of the poem.
    "The meaning implied by the self-hypnosis and dreamy confusion on rhythm is finely suggested in the image of the world of 'hoary grass' the morning that anticipates the night vision. This blurring of experience focuses in the central metaphor of the poem, essence of winter sleep. Essence is both the abstract ultimate nature of sleep and the physical smell, the scent of apples a metaphysical image in T.S. Eliot's sense of the term. Fragrance and sleep blend, and sight and touch merge in. “I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight."
    L1. 37-38. One can....sleep it is--"In these lines tone and rhythm work together beautifully, implying a great deal in relation to Frost's metaphor. The slight elevation of "One can see" recalls the more mysterious seeing of the morning just as the almost banal lyricism of "This sleep of mine" sustains the rhythm of dream-confusion. The rest of second line barely iambic, barely rhyming, casual and rough, assures us that the speaker has at least one toe in reality"

    • @sansumida
      @sansumida 2 года назад

      you commented on the wrong poem, please remove