Friday, January 3, 2003

Once By The Pacific Comments

Rating: 3.4

The shattered water made a misty din.
Great waves looked over others coming in,
And thought of doing something to the shore
That water never did to land before.
...
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Robert Frost
COMMENTS
tamieka 29 October 2018

how old are this poem

1 10 Reply
yo people 06 September 2018

hi people i am cool and i am doing this because

5 9 Reply
Joddytee 19 April 2018

Such a magnitude similarly of the foretold grip of anxiety

3 4 Reply
Joseph Defley 05 December 2017

For the most part, modern poetry is substantially oblivious to the existence of God. It is truly refreshing to find a poem which acknowledges his existence, and his awful power.

3 8 Reply
Ben Stephenson 16 February 2015

Each line of this "sonnet" lovingly flows in rhythm like an ocean wave, swelling, breaking against the shore, then sucking back out to sea. Well penned, Mr. Frost.

17 7 Reply
* Sunprincess * 02 November 2012

wow..love the religious aspect of this write..we shall usher in a new age soon in the future..fabulous

20 36 Reply
Andrew Hoellering 29 December 2009

Frost builds this scene of nature at her wildest image by image. He starts with the distant sound of the waters, moving to a superb visual perspective in the second line. The unrestrained force of nature, hinted at in the third and fourth lines, is followed by an unusual simile introducing a human element to describe the clouds. Backup in the form of cliff and continent is needed to contain such unrestricted rage before Frost changes perspective yet again, introducing a further dimension, that of time. This fine poem certainly deserves better than its 7.5% rating. I voted, but found that my vote didn’t register. Can anyone advise how to put this to rights, both here and elsewhere?

53 16 Reply
Robert Frost

Robert Frost

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