The poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” by Robert Frost is only nine lines long, but the author discusses complex topics through it. In early spring, the golden buds appear on the trees, but soon their color fades. Then flowers bloom, but they also soon turn into fallen leaves, reminiscent of humanity, which were banished from paradise. As the dull daylight replaces the golden morning light, so nothing beautiful and fresh can live forever. The first line, “Nature’s first green is gold,” sets a tone for the whole poem. “Green” here might be confusing at first, but it tells us about the freshness and youth. Thus, “gold” here is a symbol of all that is beautiful and admirable. Further, in the lines “Her hardest hue to hold” and “Her early leaf’s a flower,” Frost refers to the nature as a woman explaining that inevitable changes are taking place. In the final line, “Nothing gold can stay,” the author emphasizes that everything has its time limits. Thereby, the central theme of the poem is the inevitability of changes and, finally, decay.