Frost at Midnight - Analysis
Frost at Midnight - Analysis
Frost at Midnight - Analysis
view of Nature, descriptive ease, and the ability to delineate word pictures.
Frost at Midnight
Frost at Midnight Analysis
One night when the poet’s mind was obsessed with philosophical, subtle,
thoughts, and his little son was lying asleep in his cradle beside his bed, the
poet looks out of the cottage window and finds the atmosphere covered with
frost. It is about midnight and Nature around his cottage is calm and quiet to
The poet, looking at the frost in the night atmosphere outside his cottage,
says to himself: The frost is doing its secret service, in the scheme of Nature. It
is not being helped by any wind. The night is quiet, yet the owlet’s loud hoot
can be heard. It is as loud as the earlier one. He says all the inmates of his
cottage are at rest and asleep. They have left him alone to enjoy the peace of
this solitude that suits his philosophical tendencies. He says only his cradled
little son is sleeping beside him peacefully. The poet further says that the night
atmosphere is so calm that its strange, extreme, silence disturbs his thoughtful
The sea, the hill, the wood, and the village of countless activities of human life
all are as silent as dreams. Even the thin blue flame seems to be asleep and
still on his slowly dying fire. The poet says in this silence of Nature, its motion
reflects its silent sympathy with him who is still awake and look upon it as an
agreeable form. His unoccupied spirit interprets its little capricious movements
in the light of its own moods. For it seeks its echo or reflection everywhere
Stanza Three
In the second stanza of ‘Frost At Midnight’, the mind of the poet travels back
expectation of that thin film of light. He believed that the film was a sign of a
visitor to see him the next morning. He says, and often, having seen that film,
he was filled with the sweet vision of his birth-place, and of the old church-
tower whose bells produced the only music for the poor men of the place.
Those bells rang from morning to evening on a hot fair-day. They rang so
sweet that even their memory at school moved his being and filled him with
passionate joy. He says their tinkling sounds fill his ears like the clear sounds
of the prophecy of future events. So, he kept looking over that film and
imagined sweet things till he fell asleep, and sleep prolonged his sweet
dreams. The next morning, his mind would become occupied with the
and fixed his eyes on his book. But his thoughts were concerned with the
expectation of a visitor. So the words in the book would just swim before his
eyes. If the door opened a little, he would hastily cast a glance at it. His heart
Stanza Four
little son asleep in the cradle and tells that dear baby, your gentle breathing is
audible in this deep silence. He tells his little son that they fill up the spaces of
his vacant moods and also those of the momentary pauses in his thoughts. He
says that he was brought up in the great city of London; he was obliged to live
in rooms of dim light, and so saw nothing beautiful except the sky and the
stars. But, you, my baby son, shall be brought up here in the countryside. Here
you shall wander as freely as the breeze, along lake-margins and sandy
beaches, beneath the steep, rugged, rocks of ancient hills, and clouds which
by virtue of their vast, pliable gases, put on the shapes of lakes, seas, and
rugged rocks.
Thus, you, my child, shall see the lovely shapes and hear the intelligible sounds
reflects Himself in all things and creatures. He also contains all things in
shall mold your spirit through his influences. He shall give you Nature sweet
company whose delights make you ask for more and more.
Stanza Five
In this final stanza of ‘Frost At Midnight’, the poet says that he will rear him
Nature will cast their influences on him. They will also be his object-lessons.
In Nature’s lap, Hartley will come to love all the seasons for the sake of their
individual gifts and characteristics. He will also love the time when rain-drops
fall from the caves, or when such water drops are frozen by the frost and seen
hanging from the edges of the thatched-cottage roof, in the quiet moonlight.