Once by the Pacific
Personification and Imagery
in Robert Frost's "Once by the Pacific"
In the sonnet "Once by the Pacific," Robert Frost describes an approaching storm with an
underlying sense of gloom. At first glance Frost's poem seems to simply be describing the
elements of a violent storm at sea. The poem contains literary conventions such as personification
and imagery. Personification is used to transform the water into a menacing force and the
imagery creates a dark and
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was spoken.
Christianity describes the end of the world as a time when God will destroy all beings and things
upon the earth who did not have faith in Him. Frost's poem describes the brewing of a powerful
and destructive storm and compares it to this destruction and vengeance of God's. Frost seems to
be informing his readers of this message in a terrifying and convincing manner in order to describe
the urgency of it. .
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