For Once, Then, Something

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  • For Once, Then, Something
    • This short lyric was published in 1923, in the New Hampshire volume of poems. It seems that, it narrates a very simple commonplace happening in a pastoral setting, but actually it is Frost’s observation on the human search for truth and man’s attempts at the unraveling of the mystery of life.
      • The poet, a rural-dweller, had often been taunted and ridiculed by people for kneeling on the boundary of the village well on the wrong side, so that light was obstructed, and he could not see clearly into the well. The well was dark and he could see only up to the surface of water at the bottom of the well.
        • He could only see there a mirror image of his own face, of his own ‘God-like image’; shining out of a wreath of ferns and cloud-puffs. As Brower and Lawrence Thompson both agree, the use of the word “God-like”, for his own image, indicates the poet’s self-centered nature or his Narcissism.
          • However, one day as he was looking into the well with his chin resting on the boundary of the wall, his vision could penetrate through the water-surface and his own image on it, and see underneath the surface, in the depths of the well, something white.
            • He was not sure what it was. He could see it only for an instant, and then it vanished. He could see it no more, for a ripple was caused in the water, in all probability by the falling of a drop of water from the ferns growing over-head. It was as if more water in the form of a drop from above had come to reproach the water in the well for allowing the poet to have that visualization.
              • As soon as ripples were formed on the water, as soon as the water-surface was shaken, the vision the poet had seen vanished entirely. Since then he has always wondered what that whiteness was. Was it a vision of truth he had or was it simply a piece of stone?
                • The poet could have this transitory vision of something at the bottom of the well only once, and has ever since tried to comprehend its meaning and significance, but to no avail.
                  • On the exterior, the lyric is quite straightforward, but in reality it is a symbolic poem, symbolizing man’s never-ending pursuit of knowledge of truth and the ambiguity of life and death. It is only in uncommon moments that man can have a fleeting vision of truth, which he can see into the heart of things.
                    • It is like peering into a dark well, day after day and the vision of truth, even if at all, it is granted, would be momentary, and mysterious and vague.

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