Choose Something Like A Star
In the first three lines of the poem, actually lines 2-3 I am having trouble obtaining meaning out of. Also I know there is a tone shift at the end of the poem, I hope!, but am sort of puzzled as to what it means. My understanding is the star asks of mankind to find comfort in the star. However I feel like Im am being thrown off a train here. Did I miss the purpose of the other lines? I thought that Frost is commenting on mankinds inability to find fulfillment with their discovers and that the star was a symbol for mans need to know everything. I am desperately lost....I would love any help on this.
Here's the poem:
O Star (the fairest one in sight),
We grant your loftiness the right
To some obscurity of cloud-
It will not do to say of night,
Since dark is what brings out your light.
Some mystery becomes the proud.
But to the wholly taciturn
In your reserve is not allowed.
Say something to us we can learn
By heart and when alone repeat.
Say something! And it says, 'I burn.'
But say with what degree of heat.
Talk Fahrenheit, talk Centigrade.
Use Language we can comprehend.
Tell us what elements you blend.
It gives us strangely little aid,
But does tell something in the end
And steadfast as Keats' Eremite,
Not even stooping from its sphere,
It asks a little of us here.
It asks of us a certain height,
So when at times the mob is swayed
To carry praise or blame too far,
We may choose something like a star
To stay our minds on and be staid.
Robert Frost's Choose Something Like a Star
Hello,
I love this poem. Did you know that this poem was put to music? It's even more beautiful as a song.
What I think the poem is saying to begin with is that we are maybe a little uncomfortable with not knowing everything about nature; we can't explain it all and don't understand all there is to know. So as the poem begins, the narrator is almost chastising the star for not revealing to us the secrets of its being. We think we have a right to comprehend every mystery in the universe, and when we don't, we get impatient and frustrated, almost like a child who demands answers to questions that his parents don't know the answer to. This is particularly illustrated in the second paragraph.
But in the third, and ending paragraph, we see the beginning of acceptance on the part of the narrator as he/she realizes that the answers he seeks are not forthcoming and may never be known. That acceptance is blended with what almost feels like taking comfort from the unknowableness but steadiness of the star. The narrator seems to have resolved his conflict by releasing his need for scientific knowledge and discovering instead a peace found in a more mystical way of looking at his original quest for answers.
I just did a Google search
We sang this song for my high school state competition and won with it! I just attended the 21st anniversary benefit concert for our choir and this song has been going around and around in my mind all the way home.
I just did a google search, and this forum was the first that came up.
I learned this poem with the music set to it. I cannot simply read it now without hearing the beautiful song it is.
tundramom
Choose Something Like A Star
Hello everyone - I wanted to share my take on Robert Frost's poem and the profound message it holds for me.
First of all, as I write this, I'm listening, for the umpteenth time this morning, to a chorale ensemble rendition of the work performed in Oakland three years ago, my daughter being one of the choir members. Fortunately for me, I have a CD of the performance and listen to it from time-to-time. For some reason, this morning, I heard a message which I hadn't heard before: Carol, stay strong, focused and steady in your attempts to bring Peak Oil news to your family and community. Don't give up.
The darkness and sadness I feel as I learn more about Climate Change and Peak Oil and the implications for all our lives is sometimes more than I can bear - and takes me to a place of "it's too big, we've run out of time, few are listening, no one wants to hear of the coming sea changes and the sacrifices that will be asked of us, blah blah blah" ... total discouragement and fatalism. Emotional paralysis set in, big time.
But the combination of the soulful melody and lyrics has inspired me, one more time, to take some action here in my small, high-desert, conservative town. The words tell me to 'say something', to use 'words people in my community will understand (comprehend), and when the 'mob is swayed' (to do nothing, to ignore the signals), when citizens don't get it and/or tend not to listen, I'm to stay steadfast. Do the footwork. Let go of the results, which, actually, may turn out better than I think. I'm inspired. Thanks for listening.
Choose Something Like a Star
Hi
I have enjoyed reading everyone's comments.
I am in a chorus performing the Randall Thompson setting.
I thought you might enjoy an alternate analysis of this poem by Kelly Fineman at
http://kellyrfineman.blogspot.com/20...by-robert.html