A Roadside Stand — Robert Frost
"The polished traffic passed with a mind ahead, / Or if ever aside a moment, then out of sorts / At having the landscape marred with an ugly shed."
1. The Poem
A small, shabby stand by the side of a highway. Poor rural folk sell wild berries, squash, and flowers — hoping that the wealthy motorists racing past will STOP. They never do. Some motorists complain that the stand is an UGLY BLOT on the landscape. Others feel GUILTY — and wish the government would 'do something' about rural poverty. Frost's poem is a SCATHING CRITIQUE of the indifference of the rich and the hollow 'charity' that pretends to care.
2. Summary — Three Movements
Movement 1: The Stand and the Passing Cars
The 'little old new shack' by the highway. The poor people display their goods — 'the wild berries in wooden quarts, the crook-necked golden squash.' They HOPE the traffic will stop. It NEVER does. The 'polished traffic' races past 'with a mind ahead' — the rich motorists have more important places to be. When they DO glance aside: they're 'out of sorts' — ANNOYED that this ugly shed 'mars' the landscape.
Movement 2: The Hollow 'Help'
Some motorists are 'kind' — they feel GUILTY about the poverty. They wish the government would 'relocate' these poor people — move them to CITIES — put them in 'houses' where they won't be an EYESORE. Frost's SCATHING IRONY: this 'kindness' is about making the rich feel BETTER — not about actually HELPING the poor. 'They wish the government would put an end to things like this' — make the PROBLEM (visible poverty) DISAPPEAR, not SOLVE it.
Movement 3: The Poet's Revenge Fantasy — and the Harsh Reality
The poet FANTASISES: what if the poor rural folk had 'a promise of revenge' — the power to REFUSE THE MONEY of the rich? The rich would be 'forced to be kind' in a way they NEVER ARE — through GENUINE NEED, not hollow charity. But the fantasy ENDS. The poet knows it will NEVER HAPPEN. The rural poor will continue to be IGNORED, complained about, and 'helped' by programmes that DON'T HELP.
3. Themes
1. Rural Poverty and Urban Indifference
The ESSENTIAL THEME. The 'polished traffic' represents the WEALTHY, the URBAN, the POWERFUL — who IGNORE the rural poor. They don't see PEOPLE. They see an UGLY SHED that 'mars' the view.
2. The Lie of 'Charity'
The 'do-gooders' who want the government to 'solve' rural poverty are EXPOSED. Their concern is not for the poor — it's for their OWN CONSCIENCE. 'They wish... to put an end to things like this' — make the POVERTY (the eyesore) disappear, not the POVERTY.
3. The Rural-Urban Divide
The 'little old new shack' vs the 'polished traffic.' The berries and squash vs the destinations the cars are rushing toward. Two Indias that NEVER MEET — except when one complains about the other.
4. The Fantasy of Revenge
The poet's 'revenge' fantasy is a DREAM OF JUSTICE — where the poor WIELD POWER, and the rich are FORCED to confront what they've ignored. But Frost KNOWS it's a fantasy. The last lines: the poor will be 'hushed' — their needs managed, their voices silenced.
4. Literary Devices
- IRONY: The 'kind' motorists who are KIND only to ease their OWN guilt
- CONTRAST: The 'little old new shack' vs the 'polished traffic.' The 'wild berries' vs the 'city money.'
- IMAGERY: 'Crook-necked golden squash' — the BEAUTY of the rural produce. The 'polished traffic' — the cold, gleaming MACHINES of wealth.
- TONE: Starts observational, becomes IRONIC, then ANGRY, then RESIGNED. Frost's fury at injustice is COLD — not hot. That makes it MORE powerful.
5. Conclusion
'A Roadside Stand' is Robert Frost's angriest poem — a sustained ATTACK on the indifference of the wealthy toward the poor:
- THE STAND: 'Wild berries in wooden quarts.' The poor DISPLAY their goods.
- THE CARS: 'Polished traffic.' They don't stop. They're ANNOYED the stand exists.
- THE 'GOOD PEOPLE': They want the problem 'solved' — meaning: MADE INVISIBLE.
- THE POET: Dreams of a world where the poor have POWER. Knows it's a dream.
Frost wrote: 'The hurt to the scenery, the heart could feel, / Was nothing to the hurt to the heart.'
