“Birches” by Robert Frost: An Optical Poem, 2024

“When I see birches bend to left and right / Across the lines of straighter darker trees, / I like to think some boy’s been swinging them.” On April 7, 1955, Robert Frost delivered a poetry reading at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This article is part of From the Vaults, a series that shines a light on the Museum’s audiovisual archive.

“When I see birches bend to left and right / Across the lines of straighter darker trees, / I like to think some boy’s been swinging them.” On April 7, 1955, Robert Frost delivered a poetry reading at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Here, the Pulitzer Prize–winning author recites his classic poem “Birches,” in which an older narrator reflects on the solitude of a childhood spent swinging birch trees in the forest. This optical poem illustrates Frost’s recitation with artworks from The Met’s collection juxtaposed with footage of wildlife in Kingston, New York. The event, originally recorded on reel-to-reel audio tape, was digitized in 2020.

Other poets invited to read at The Met included W. H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, and E. E. Cummings.

Read the poem here.


Wood scene showing a commotion of figures and animals in distress
Video
Listen to an optical poem illustrating W. H. Auden’s recitation of “Woods” with artworks from The Met collection, juxtaposed with footage of wildlife in Kingston, New York.
February 21, 2025
A child holds up a multicolored paper ornament in a fuzzy image
Video
Photographed in Ahmedabad, India, this short film follows a Dalit woman as she makes a bean-bag parrot from scavenged materials.
March 21, 2025
Archival image of model figures examining technology displays and floorplans at The Met.
Video
In 1975, Charles and Ray Eames produced a short film exploring how The Met might “host” guests and foster connections between the public and its collection.
June 18, 2025

A slider containing 13 items.
Press the down key to skip to the last item.
Autumn Landscape, Tiffany Studios, Leaded Favrile glass, American
Tiffany Studios
Designer Attributed to Agnes F. Northrop
1923–24
A Man Reading in a Garden (recto); Preliminary sketch for a Man Reading in a Garden (verso), Honoré Daumier  French, Watercolor over black chalk, with pen and ink, brush and wash, and lithographic crayon.<br/>Verso: pen and brown ink, black gray wash, and lithographic crayon
Honoré Daumier
ca. 1865
Landscape with Three Trees in the Foreground, Lucas Achtschellinck  Flemish, Graphite, with brush and gray and black wash, with body color
Lucas Achtschellinck
1641–99
Our Young Folks, an Illustrated Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. III, Nos. I-XII, John Townsend Trowbridge  American, Illustrations: steel engraving, wood engraving, color wood engraving
Multiple artists/makers
1867
Winter Scene with Two Men, Eugène Cicéri  French, Watercolor over graphite, heightened with white; framing lines in graphite
Eugène Cicéri
1830–90
Pine Trees and Birches, Rockwell Kent  American, Gouache
Rockwell Kent
ca. 1950
Frühlingsanfang, from the series "Radierte Skizzen", Max Klinger  German, Etching and aquatint on chine collé
Max Klinger
n.d.
Birch Tree Uprooted by a Storm, Jean Jacques de Boissieu  French, Etching with drypoint and roulette; seventh state of eight  (Perez)
Jean Jacques de Boissieu
Publisher Johann Friedrich Frauenholz
1809
A Lane through the Trees, Camille Corot  French, Oil on canvas
Camille Corot
ca. 1870–73
An Early Summer Morning in the Forest of Fontainebleau, Théodore Rousseau  French, Oil on wood
Théodore Rousseau
probably 1861
The Forest in Winter at Sunset, Théodore Rousseau  French, Oil on canvas
Théodore Rousseau
ca. 1846–67
Birch in the Highlands (Birch im Hochland), with a woman in a cloak and hat standing behind a tree, Olaf Abrahamsen Willums  Norwegian, Etching
Olaf Abrahamsen Willums
1923
Palisades, Rudolph Ruzicka  American, born Czechoslovakia, Color wood engraving; printed in three colors
Rudolph Ruzicka
1917