jlh+Mine+with+inner,+weather

"Mine with inner, weather." Frost uses this as the last line of this poem and it is meant to be strong and meaningful. In this poem, Frost describes this tree at his window as beautiful and simple, also speaking as the "inner weather" could represent the complications and emotional problems in one's life. The tree, "taken and tossed," and him, "all but lost." Life is full of problems, and this "inner weather," acts as the pain inside, rather than outside. The tree may be taken and tossed, but it doesn't deal with the pain Frost feels from the "inner weather." Throughout the poem, Frost suggests that the two are connected. The tree is like a man, and represented in this poem, leads to more difficult and more complicated lives which they are often thinking of as "inner."