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Robert Frost's Nothing Gold Can Stay

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In “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, it is obvious that Robert Frost talks about so much more than some flowers and leaves. In just eight simple lines, he beautifully describes what would seem like an eternity or an entire lifetime. Pulling off a restatement of a classic theme, Frost (more or less) speaks up about how gold is too hard of a hue to hold for long, the theme of this poem is simple: nothing good and valuable lasts forever, but it can still change for the better In the first line, “Nature's first green is gold,” Frost talks about the effervescent of nature’s greens (trees, grass, etc.) turn into gold. A metaphor nevertheless, it is clear that gold the most precious thing, the item of most value. “Her hardest hue to hold,” shows a rich analogy

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