A Road Side Stand
A Road Side Stand
A Road Side Stand
-ROBERT FROST
The Roadside Stand by Robert Frost tells the sad plight of economically underfed people who are often
fooled by the cunning people who are responsible for their pathetic existence. The poet cannot bear
their sadness so he sympathizes with them.
Stanza 1
The little old house was out with a little new shed
In front at the edge of the road where the traffic sped,
A roadside stand that too pathetically pled…
Meaning
1. Why was the ‘little old house’ extended towards the road?
The little old house, the roadside stand, existed on the roadside to make a living out of the city
money. The owners of the roadside stand expected to attract the rich city men by extending the
stand closer to the road.
2. Which traffic is referred to here? Why are they ‘speeding?’
The traffic referred to here is the cars and other vehicles of the rich people from and to various
cities. These rich city men are in great hurry to make money by doing business in the city.
3. Why is the Stand’s existence said to be ‘pathetic?’
The roadside stand’s sole expectation is the flow of city-money into their hands. But their
expectations are never fulfilled as the rich men are not considerate about them and hence a pathetic
existence for the roadside stand.
Next – Stanza 2
It would not be fair to say for a dole of bread
But for some of the city money, the cash, whose flow supports
The flower of cities from sinking and withering faint…
Meaning
1. Why is it unfair to say that these people are begging for a ‘dole of bread?’
One may think that the poor people at the roadside stand are beggars. But they are not. Unlike the
beggars, who beg unconditionally, shamelessly and sometimes unreasonably, the people of the
roadside stand have something to sell, some information to share and a noble reason behind their
begging.
2. What do the poor people really expect from the rich?
The poor people expect a small share of the money from the rich people.
3. How do the poor people look at the city money?
For the poor people at the roadside stand money is very essential for growth and survival. It boosts
the growth of the city and the city people.
4. What is the flower of the cities? How?
Prosperity/growth is the flower of the cities. As the flower is the crowning glory of a plant, growth
becomes the flower of a city.
The city men – rich enough to be insensitive to the sufferers – pass by, in their cars. While passing by
the raodside stand, they grow angry and speed away, cursing the poor lot.
Stanza 3
The polished traffic passed with a mind ahead
Or, if ever aside a moment, then out of sorts
At having the landscape marred with the artless paint
Of signs with S turned wrong and N turned wrong…
Stanza 4
Offered for sale are wild berries in wooden quarts
Or crook necked golden squash with silver warts,
Or beauty rest in a mountain scene…
1. What do the poor people of the roadside stand feel when the citymen decline from buying
anything?
When the rich city men decline to buy articles from the roadside stand, the poor runners of the
stand feel dejected and angry. They ask the city men to keep their money with them and leave
the roadside stand without further bargain or comments.
2. How do the rich people behave meanly in front of the roadside stand?
3. Do you justify the poor people’s growing angry with the rich people’s attitude? Explain your
stand.
Stanza 6
The hurt to the scenery wouldn’t be my complaint
So much as the trusting sorrow of what is unsaid:
1. Why is the poet’s complaint different from that of the rich city men?
The rich city men have their hollow complaints that come out of their failure to understand the
core level struggles of the poor. But the poet is concerned for the poor and therefore his
complaints are relevant.
2. What do you mean by the trusting sorrow of the poor people?
The poor people are instinctively sensitive and expectant to the promises of the rich and the
mighty. They believe their hollow promises and wait for their realization. But finally their hopes
give way to the miserable realization that the promises made by the rich are not meant to be
fulfilled.
3. What do you understand when the poet says that the trusting sorrow of the poor people is
‘unsaid?’
The poor people place their trust in the fake promises of the rich people and the ruling parties
and consequently become sorrowful. The poet complains that this sorrow of the poor people has
not been brought to the serious concern of the concerned authorities, media and the public.
Next – Stanza 7
Here, far from the city we make our roadside stand
And ask for some city money to feel in hand
To try it will (not) make our being expand…
Meaning
Feel in hand: The poor people do not want promises. They want the promises fulfilled. Feel
money in hand is different from having money between the giver and the taker – Being: Life –
Expand: Improve
1. What do the people at the roadside stand expect from the rich? What for?
The poor people at the roadside stand expect the generosity of the rich city people. They hope to
alleviate their poverty by getting money from the city people.
2. How is feeling in hand different from the false promises of the parties?
Feeling in hand means possessing what the parties in power have promised, not owning mere
promises. If one feels the promised money in hand, it means he has acquired it rather than being
fooled by the parties that have given them the promises.
3. What is city money? How is city money expected to help the poor people?
Unlike the meager amount of money possessed by the poor villager, city money is considerably
huge. The city money is expected by the poor villager not only to alleviate his wretched state of
poverty, but also to give his a considerable financial rise in life.
Next – Stanza 8
And give us the life of the moving pictures’ promise
That the party in power is said to be keeping from us.
1. What are moving pictures? What kind of life is promised by the ‘moving pictures?
The movies the poor people have watched are full of promises for them. In those movies they
saw people who journeyed from poverty to prosperity.
2. What do ‘the parties in power’ ‘keep from the poor people?
The governments and the corrupted politicians keep the share and the allotted rights of the poor
people away from them and use that for their selfish motives.
3. How are the rich politicians responsible for the misery of the poor people?
The rich and corrupted politicians keep the money assigned by the government for the poor
people in their own malicious hands and make selfish use of them, thus depriving the poor
people of their rights, happiness and all that they deserve.
Stanza 9
It is in the news that all these pitiful kin
Are to be bought out and mercifully gathered in
To live in villages, next to the theater and the store,
Where they won’t have to think for themselves anymore…
1. Who are the greedy good doers? What is the irony in the ‘greedy good-doers?’
The business class and the political parties and leaders are the greedy good-doers mentioned
here. A greedy person cannot be a good doer. These good doers intend to make money out of the
poor people by appearing beneficent to them.
2. What does ‘beneficent beast of prey’ imply?
Similar to ‘greedy good-doers,’ ‘the beneficent beasts of prey’ is also an indication to the greedy
people who make money in the name of social and political and charitable works.
3. How do the rich ‘enforce benefits’ on the poor?
In business, promises wrapped up in glossy appearances have great value. The rich business
people convince the poor of the advantages of their new schemes and promotions and make
them buy their products and be their customers.
4. What sort of calculation is made to ‘soothe the wits of the poor?’ Does this calculation
work? How?
The business minded city people attract the poor people with their well-planned promotional
offers and promises. These promises and offers are such a way calculated that the poor people
cannot escape the traps of the rich. The business man’s calculations work well as there is a more
efficient brain behind all these promises.
Next – Stanza 11
And (by) teaching them how to sleep, they sleep all day,
Destroy their sleeping at night the ancient way…
Next – Stanza 12
Sometimes I feel myself I can hardly bear
The thought of so much childish longing in vain,
The sadness that lurks near the open window there,
That waits all day in almost open prayer…
Stanza 13
For the squeal of brakes, the sound of a stopping car
Of all the thousand selfish cars that pass
Just one to inquire what a farmer’s prices are…
1. How do the poor people react to the squeal of brake in front of the roadside stand?
At the sound of the squeal of brakes, the sound of a stopping car, the poor people at the stand
feel their spirits cheered at the possible arrival of a customer to buy their things.
2. Why are the cars called ‘selfish cars?
The cars are selfish because the people who travel in them are self centered.
3. What do you understand by ‘farmer’s prices?’ Who want to know that? Possibly why?
Farmer’s prices refer to the wages for which the farmer could be hired to work in the city.
Farmer’s prices can also refer to the prices of the berries, squash and paintings displayed at the
roadside stand for sale.
4. What make you think that the city men stopped at the roadside stand to hire farmers to
work in the city and that farmer’s price refers to the per head wages to be paid to a farmer
for working in the city?
Stanza 14
And one did stop, but only to plow up grass
In using the yard to back and turn around;
And another to ask the way to where it was bound;
And another to ask, “could you sell a gallon of gas?”
1. How do the city men plow up grass in the yard of the roadside stand?
The insensitive and selfish city men drive their cars into the yard of the roadside stand to back
and turn it around, leaving a huge cloud of grass plowed up.
2. What is the most queer demand of the rich man at the roadside stand? How is it queer?
The insensitive city man demands a gallon of gas at the roadside stand. This is queer because the
city man is not aware of the fact that the poor man cannot provide him with expensive items
such as gas.
3. Why are the poor people angry with the city men when they ask for gas?
The roadside stand has the store of wild berries, squash and paintings which are never bought
buy the city men. On the contrary the city men require a gallon of gas and the roadside stand
does not have it for sale. This helplessness make the poor people angry.
Next – Stanza 15
They couldn’t (this crossly), they had none, didn’t it see?
No, in country, money, the country scale of gain,
The requisite lift of sprint, has never been found..
Meaning
1. Why do the people at the roadside stand talk ‘crossly’ with the rich people?
The poor people sometimes become angry with the rich people. The latter refuse to buy the wild
berries at the stand at a price demanded by the owners of the stand. They indulge in bargain and
blame the berries and squash. But the poor, who know the rich people are so mean, grow angry
at their unwillingness to help them by parting with a little amount of their money.
2. How is money important for the village people?
The village people think that money is important for growth in the village. They hope to make
improvements in their wretched state of life.
3. What are the two significant roles of money in the lives of the poor people?
Money is the measuring rode of growth for the village people. They estimate their economic
growth by means of the small amount of money at hand. Similarly, money is necessary for a
villager to feel confident. He feels a ‘lift of spirit’ with money in reach.
4. How does money become the ‘requisite lift of spirit for the country men?
Money is the most important requirement for man in the modern world. If one has money at
hand then he feels confident and a feeling of his spirit being lifted.
5. Why is money never found in the villages?
It is a common truth that countryside is backward and therefore it remains poor and penniless.
Moreover the country folks are easy targets of the politicians and business-men and therefore
they are easily cheated and looted. Besides, if these poor people are given money then they will
migrate to prosperous cities or make a city in the place of their village.
Stanza 16
Or, so, the voice of the country seems to complain.
I can’t help owning the great relief it would be
To put these people at one stroke out of their pain…
Meaning
Stanza 17
And then next day as I come back into the sane,
I wonder how I should like you to come to me
And offer to put me out of my pain.
Meaning
1. What does the poet see when he comes back into his senses?
The poet sees the city cars still passing without feelings, the helplessness of the poor people and
the endless misery of the people at the roadside stand.
2. What does the poet want his readers do for him?
The poet is greatly distressed that the poor people are not helped by the government and rich
people. He finally resorts to some heavenly help for the poor by which their poverty would be
removed. But soon he realizes how childish his dreams are seeing that the poor haven’t
improved. At this point the poet wants his readers to promise him to help the poor.
3. What is the poet’s pain?
The poet’s pain is that the poor people are still waiting for the rich people’s generosity and that
the rich people never help the poor people. He is also sad that his insane dreams of the poor
people helped by a stroke were only dreams.
4. How can his readers remove the poet’s pain?
The readers can get the poet out of his pain by offering to help the poor people.
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