Design
Design
Design
:- Robert Frost
Introduction to the Poet
Robert Frost (Robert Lee Frost)
• The poet has constructed the image of a fat and white-dimpled spider
which had caught hold of a moth-like white piece of the satin cloth on
a flower called white heal-all.
The white color of the wicked flower heal-all and the white natural born
killer spider bring forth the image of an actual horror scene and the
innocence ness of the white color does not matter here
• The speaker begins the poem by describing a spider that is “fat” and
“dimpled.” The words give us the idea of the appearance of the spider.
• The second line tell us that the heal-all flower is white. (instead of blue)
• A new character, the moth, has been introduced. They represent the
“characters of death and blight”.
Line 3 & 4
“Like a white piece of rigid satin cloth--
Assorted characters of death and blight”
• Emphasize that the scene is all set. They are "ready to begin."
• The fifth line has a musical rhythm by using alliteration and internal
rhyme. Death and blight are the two essentials that are needed to start
a morning right.
• The poet says that death and blight are the parts of a witches’ broth
Line 7 & 8
“A snow-drop spider, a flower like a froth,
And dead wings carried like a paper kite.”
• The white and fragile moth is now dead and the mention of the “paper
kite” brings to mind the butterfly by the same name.
Octet (1 – 8 lines).
• Irony: heal all, white spider (though the flower is given the name as heal
all, it cannot heal the moth and spider seen as friendly and pure but its
action is evil)
• Juxtaposition: death and blight, spider and white satin clothe (two different
things put together to compare and contrast.)
• The adjectives "wayside" and "innocent" emphasize this same idea that the
flower didn't do anything to make itself white.
• The reader gets the sense that in the end there is nothing that can be done to
stop the workings of life and death.
Line 11 & 12
“What brought the kindred spider to that height,
Then steered the white moth thither in the night?”
• “kindred” is used to show the relationship of the flower and the spider
(highly Ironic & personified)
• The word "appall" can be seen as a pun on the words "a pall," which
is the cloth that's spread over a coffin
Sestet (Line 9 – 14)
• Rhyme: the of deviation from original Petrarchan sonnet sestet suggest the
puzzlement of the poet about the design.
Themes
“Design” raises profound issues related to the creation / nature/ perception and
event artistry
Appearance and Reality
Life as an illusion.
Structure & Literary devices
• Sestet – ACAA
Unusually restrictive rhyming scheme
• CC
*Sestet concludes with a couplet like a Shakespearean sonnet.
Thank you