Friday, January 3, 2003

Design Comments

Rating: 3.9

I found a dimpled spider, fat and white,
On a white heal-all, holding up a moth
Like a white piece of rigid satin cloth --
Assorted characters of death and blight
...
Read full text

Robert Frost
COMMENTS
Practicing Poetess 23 February 2019

A well-written poem that ponders design, by Robert Frost. Love his rhyme pattern.

1 0 Reply
Mahtab Bangalee 23 February 2019

this full of imagery poem/// great hand penned greatly

1 0 Reply
Ratnakar Mandlik 23 February 2019

Minute observations of the poet and the flight of imagery that helped him to compose such a beautiful poem are simply amazing.

2 0 Reply
Edward Kofi Louis 23 February 2019

In a thing so small! ! Thanks for sharing this poem with us.

0 0 Reply
Tom Allport 23 February 2019

From the biggest to the small nature's beauty designs all?

1 0 Reply
Adrian Flett 23 February 2019

'If design govern in a thing so small' Such a strong image of the inevitability of life's design.

1 0 Reply
Dr Antony Theodore 23 February 2019

Like the ingredients of a witches' broth - A snow-drop spider, a flower like a froth, And dead wings carried like a paper kite. Robert Frost a great poet. tony

1 0 Reply
Bernard F. Asuncion 23 February 2019

A captivating poem by Robert Frost........

1 0 Reply
bbbbbbb 07 January 2019

bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb

1 1 Reply
Walterrean Salley 24 November 2016

(Design by Robert Frost.) **Design; aan amazing theory. I believe all things are by design.

0 6 Reply
Chris Oberg 09 February 2016

what justifies the poet's description of the characters as characters of death and blight?

4 8 Reply
Chris Oberg 09 February 2016

what justifies the poet's description of them as characters of death and blight?

1 8 Reply
Brian Jani 26 April 2014

Awesome I like this poem, check mine out

8 22 Reply
isla Arundel 20 March 2014

The beauty of Frost is his simplicity. And he did love to appear simple, too. Of course, so much polish and structure and discipline goes into creating that illusion of easiness. And the simplicity of the subjects he chooses, the rural pictures he uses, their apparent smallness ably conceals the actual enormity of what he's saying. Frost was the master of disguise and I'm sure he delighted in that. 'Design' is my favourite of his because I feel it's maybe his most honest piece. It's about the horror that seems to underpin existence, especially if you look too closely. The more you zoom in, the more clearly you see that down to the tiniest pixel, the pattern of casual, random, impersonal cruelty is fixed.

24 12 Reply
* Sunprincess * 26 October 2012

A most picturesque and beautiful write, of the white spider on the flower with his captive..fabulous! .. :)

30 29 Reply
Allison Helman 08 June 2012

Everything I've read by Robert Frost is a diamond. Sometimes beginning with the exposure of a flaw, A self contained, powered, icy, fiery gem emitting light beyond time, beyond any measure like space itself. One cannot find meaning satisfying enough as we do with lesser poets because comprehension alone relegates his poem to the past. One must as well continually marvel forever with the essence like Mozart.. Twinkle, twinkle.

31 27 Reply
Yacov Mitchenko 22 August 2011

Why this poem has an average rating of 7.9 is beyond me. The phrasing is fresh, taut, highly economical, and the associations are surprising ('like a paper kite'/Like the ingredients of a witches' broth', in particular) . The poem has good line breaks, beautiful alliteration, and fluidity of expression. It seems very easy to write, which is a sure hallmark of a master. The poem glitters with diamond-like rhymes. And it happens to be deceptively deep. The reader is carried along by a smooth, hypnotising rhythm, which can lull one into superficial, careless reading. The narrator is uncertain whether what's witnessed is by design - by design of a cruel or malevolent force (as suggested by the 'witches' broth- simile) . But he seems inclined to think it is. There is irony and dark playfulness to boot: 'Mixed ready to begin the morning right'/'...like a paper kite.' There is no caring Creator here: there is only the cruel cycle of eating and being eaten. What I appreciate is Frost's honesty and integrity: he doesn't try to present a rosy picture of God by suggesting THERE IS A HIGHER PURPOSE TO THIS SHIT; WE MUST HAVE FAITH. GOD IS GOOD, even if HE/SHE appears cruel or indifferent. The narrator restricts himself to what is observed, speculates in a playful way, without being led away by pleasant (stale/unoriginal) theories and/or beliefs. He basically admits he isn't sure what really is in the background of our existence, and doesn't try to cover up the uncertainty with rosy affirmations and cliches, after the manner of a coward.

77 33 Reply
Andrew Hoellering 28 May 2009

Frost’s brilliance emerges in the difference between this final version and its preliminary, In White. A comparison of the two poems is illuminating. In Design he changes the first line to ‘I found a dimpled spider, fat and white.’ ‘Lifeless’ becomes ‘vivid’(L.3) and the fourth line ‘Assorted characters of death and blight.’ ‘Snow-drop’ replaces ‘beady’ in Line 7, and the 8th line now reads ‘And dead wings carried like a paper kite.’ Each substitution is more realistic, convincing and ominous, foreshadowing Design’s conclusion: What brought the kindred spider to that height, Then steered the white moth thither in the night? What but design of darkness to appal? - If design govern in a thing so small.

34 32 Reply
Robert Frost

Robert Frost

San Francisco
Close
Error Success