Robert Frost: Poems

comment on the repetition of "they" in the second last line of the poem

from the poem "out, out-"

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I think the repetition of "they" represents the narrator's frustration with the death of this young boy. He calls the living "they" as if the people can't comprehend such a tragedy. The living in this New England town carry on "to their affairs" as if mourning or serous reflection had not taken place.

I think the repetition of "they" represents the narrator's frustration with the death of this young boy. He calls the living "they" as if the people can't comprehend such a tragedy. There is a sense of otherness to the living. The living in this New England town carry on "to their affairs" as if mourning or serious reflection had not taken place.