The Egg and the Machine
The Egg and the Machine - context Summary
Published 1936
Robert Frost's "The Egg and the Machine" was published in 1936 in the collection A Further Range. The poem contrasts a mechanical engine’s disruptive passage with a small, patient natural life—turtles burying eggs—highlighting collisions between industrial force and quiet living things. Placed in the mid-1930s, the poem belongs to Frost’s later work when he often explored modernity’s impact on rural life. Its context in A Further Range frames the poem as part of Frost’s sustained engagement with how technology and progress intrude upon, threaten, or coexist uneasily with traditional landscapes and rhythms.
Read Complete AnalysesHe gave the solid rail a hateful kick. From far away there came an answering tick And then another tick. He knew the code: His hate had roused an engine up the road. He wished when he had had the track alone He had attacked it with a club or stone And bent some rail wide open like switch So as to wreck the engine in the ditch. Too late though, now, he had himself to thank. Its click was rising to a nearer clank. Here it came breasting like a horse in skirts. (He stood well back for fear of scalding squirts.) Then for a moment all there was was size Confusion and a roar that drowned the cries He raised against the gods in the machine. Then once again the sandbank lay serene. The traveler’s eye picked up a turtle train, between the dotted feet a streak of tail, And followed it to where he made out vague But certain signs of buried turtle’s egg; And probing with one finger not too rough, He found suspicious sand, and sure enough, The pocket of a little turtle mine. If there was one egg in it there were nine, Torpedo-like, with shell of gritty leather All packed in sand to wait the trump together. ‘You’d better not disturb any more,’ He told the distance, ‘I am armed for war. The next machine that has the power to pass Will get this plasm in it goggle glass.’
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