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  2. Feb 22, 2021 · My Butterfly: An Elegy was Frost’s first professionally published poem. It was self-published privately in 1894 in Twilight, appeared in the November 1894 issue of the Independent , and was then collected in Frost’s first collection, A Boy’s Will .

  3. My Butterfly. Robert Frost. 1874 –. 1963. Thine emulous fond flowers are dead, too, And the daft sun-assaulter, he. That frighted thee so oft, is fled or dead: Save only me. (Nor is it sad to thee!)

  4. How elegant to describe his love as a butterfly that flew away from God’s grasp, just wondering where she flew off to. Though this poem is quite cold and saddening, it is strangely heart warming as well.

  5. Robert Frost, ‘Blue-Butterfly Day’. The American poet Robert Frost (1874-1963) was a contemporary of the modernists, but he rejected their focus on free verse and preferred to write more directly about the world of nature and his own place within it, using rather than dismissing traditional forms.

  6. The poem is notable for its use of vivid imagery and sensory details. The speaker recalls the butterfly's "dazzling other ones" and its "great careless wings." He also remembers the "languor" of the day he found the broken wing, and the "gem-flower" that waved in a wand.

  7. My Butterfly. Thine emulous fond flowers are dead, too, And the daft sun—assaulter, he. That frighted thee so oft, is fled or dead: Save only me. (Nor is it sad to thee!) Save only me.

  8. Dec 8, 2023 · “My Butterfly” tells the sorrow felt by the speaker over the death of a butterfly he had seen the previous summer. The butterfly which once inspired joy and magic in the speaker now leaves the speaker to question Fate and God as the forces which rule the cosmos.