Dust of Snow Summary
Dust of Snow Summary
Grade: X
Summary
In this stanza, the poet is talking about a winter’s day when all the treetops were
covered with snowflakes. The poet was walking under one such snow-covered
tree. This was the North American conifer known as the hemlock named so
because its smell resembles that of the European plant from which the poison
known as hemlock was made. Hence, by virtue of its name, this tree was not one
that you could associate with anything positive. However, a crow alighted on this
tree suddenly, and because of that sudden motion, the mass of snowflakes atop
it fell down on the poet like rain. The snowflakes were so light and miniscule that
the poet thought they looked like white and immaculate dust particles (if indeed
dust particles could ever be white). This shower of snowflakes from the hemlock
tree is evidently the subject matter of this poem, since it touched the poet in some
way.
In this stanza, the poet explains to us exactly in what way the shower of
snowflakes had an effect on him. He says that it changed his mood. That is to
say, he had been in a sullen or despairing mood, and the snowflakes falling on
him all of a sudden gladdened his heart. In addition to this, there was another
effect that the shower of snowflakes had on the poet. He says that that particular
day was one that he had not been looking forward to, and in fact, it was not going
too well either.
He had decided, in his mind, that that particular day would go to waste. However,
the shower of dust-like snow on his shoulder changed his mind. It made him feel
that the day had not been a complete waste. At least some part of that day had
been pleasant, since it had given him a new experience that he could treasure as
well as the material for another one of his wonderful poetic compositions.