Nature's first green is gold, - When you are young, you are new.
Her hardest hue to hold. - Nobody can stay that way.
Her early leaf's a flower, - Before you grow, you are curious about life.
But only so an hour. - You end up becoming familiar with things in life.
Then leaf subsides to leaf, - Everybody is the same in this particular way.
So Eden sank to grief. - The once beautiful and new things in life are now old.
And dawn goes down to day, - Once again, Beautiful things will not stay.
Nothing gold can stay. - The conclusion.
Robert Frost means nothing
Nothing gold can stay means that nothing that is new or beautiful can stay forever. The poem meant, when you are a kid your gold. New to the world, but as you get older, everything is getting old.Nothing Gold Can Stay is a poem that written by Robert Frost. This poem was later used by S.E. Hinton in her book called The Outsiders.
If you mean a translation of the title, it's esh vekerakh me'et Robert Frost (?? ???? ??? ????? ?????)
a peck of gold
If you mean Robert Frost, one connection would be that his son Carol committed suicide with a rifle.
Nothing
They mean that by implying its cold outside/inside comparing to where you are. Glad this helped :)
the poem applys to the characters because Pony and Johnny are gold because everything are new to them but Two-bit, Tim, Darry, Steve and more character espeacility Dallas were gold but not any more.
Nothing, there is so religious significance to gold relating to the Christian Easter celebration.
First, Ezra Pound is not a her. Second, if you mean "called on" to mean the time (in 1913) when Frost went to Pound's address in Kensington to call on him, that happened as a result of Pound's inviting him to come and see him, after Frost was mentioned to Pound by F. S. Flint--who had met him at the opening of the Poetry Bookshop in January.
Hue is a shade of colour. You haven't specified what poem of Robert Frost's, and he wrote quite a few, so it is difficult to answer the question properly in context.
Questioning faces by Robert Frost refers to expressions that show doubt, uncertainty, or curiosity. In his poem "The Road Not Taken," Frost describes the diverging paths in the woods that lead to questioning faces because they symbolize the choices and decisions we face in life.