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  2. May 13, 2011 · A poem about a man splitting wood and encountering two tramps who want to take his job for pay. The poem explores the themes of work, love, need, and the relationship between man and nature.

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    • 540
    • Iambic pentameter
  3. As my two eyes make one in sight. For Heaven and the future's sakes. Analysis (ai): The poem, set amidst the mud time of April, chronicles an encounter between the narrator, a woodsman, and two unemployed "tramps." As they watch the narrator split wood, one tramp requests to take over his job.

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    This section of the poem describes the enjoyment derived by the speaker. He had the satisfaction of doing his job well and also finding relaxation from the tensions of life through this hard work. The speaker was chopping good prices of a large Oak-tree. These pieces were quite large like the tree he was chopping. Every piece that he hit with all h...

    This section contains a beautiful description of natural phenomena around the poet at the time of his engagement in the task of wood-chopping. It was a day in the month of April. The sun was warm, and a chill was there in the wind. Such a sunny day in Aril reminds one of the weather in the month of May, and one might find himself ‘one month on in t...

    The description of the spring season is continued in this stanza. Because of the chilly wind, the bluebird who comes to alight, keeps its feathers composed and unruffled in the wind. Realizing that it is not yet Spring, it sings a song in such a toneas not to inspire or excite ‘A single flower as yet to bloom’. That means the blossoming time has, i...

    In the summertime, there may be a scarcity of water, and we may have to search for it with the help of a witching-wand (stick used for discovering water). But now, in this Spring season, we may find rivulets in the ruts or furrows made on the road by wheels of carriages, or in the prints of the hooves of animals. We may feel happy about the presenc...

    In this stanza, the speaker defends his act of wood-chopping. The tramps seem to criticize him for doing this work for pleasure, whereas they might do it for need or money. The speaker says that they make him, because of their attitudeof selfishness, love this task all the more. He remarks that he has never enjoyed the doing of this physical work i...

    This stanza picks up the thread of the story after a gap of three previous stanzasin which the poet represents the vagaries of the climate in New England region. Two stout tramps are referred to as coming towards the speaker. It is not known where they might have slept last night, but it is certain that they have been in lumber-camps. They are prof...

    Neither the speaker nor the tramps said anything. The tramps thought that they had simply to stand watching the speaker doing the work of wood-chopping and that finally the speaker would be convicted of their point of view, according to which the speaker had no right to do for enjoyment or recreation a work which ought to be done by some other man ...

    In the opinion of the poet, nobody can accept the separation of the two rights mentioned above. That is, the right to do something for pleasure, and the right to do it for gain, cannot be treated as existing apart from each other. They exist together. The speaker’s aim in life, as he himself tells, is to unite these two rights, or to combine his ‘v...

    Learn about the meaning and themes of Frost's poem, which describes his interaction with two jobless men who want to take his job for pay. Explore the poet's use of imagery, symbolism, and contrast to express his views on work, wealth, and life.

  4. A poem by Robert Frost about splitting wood and facing two strangers who want to take his job for pay. The poem explores the themes of work, love, need, and the relationship between man and nature.

  5. Learn about Robert Frost's poem \"Two Tramps in Mud Time\", which depicts a moment of ethical dilemma and pastoral beauty during the Depression. Explore the themes, forms, devices, and critical responses of this classic work.

  6. Two Tramps in Mud Time By Robert Frost Out of the mud two strangers came And caught me splitting wood in the yard, And one of them put me off my aim By hailing cheerily "Hit them hard!" I knew pretty well why he had dropped behind And let the other go on a way. I knew pretty well what he had in mind: He wanted to take my job for pay.

  7. A poem about a man splitting wood and two strangers who interrupt him and challenge his work. The poem explores the themes of labor, nature, and the relationship between love and need.

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