“Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words,” Robert Frost once said. As is made fairly obvious by this quote, Frost was an adroit thinker. It seems like he spent much of his life thinking about the little things. He often pondered the meaning and symbolism of things he found in nature. Many readers find Robert Frost’s poems to be straightforward, yet his work contains deeper layers of complexity beneath the surface. These deeper layers of complexity can be clearly seen in his poems “ The Road Not Taken”, “Fire and Ice”, and “Birches”. Robert Lee Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco. When his father died, he moved to Massachusetts with his family to be closer to his grandparents. He loved to stay active through sports and activities such as trapping animals and climbing trees. He married his co- valedictorian, Elinor Miriam White, in 1895. He dropped out of both Dartmouth and Harvard in his lifetime. Robert and Elinor settled on a farm in Massachusetts which his grandfather bought him, and it was one of the many farms on which he would live in throughout his life. Frost spend the next 9 years writing poetry while poultry farming. When poultry farming didn’t work out, he went back to teaching English. He moved to England in 1912 and became friends with many people who were also in the writing business. After moving back to America in 1915, Frost bought a farm in New Hampshire and began reading his poems aloud at public
Robert Frost is one of the most widely-read and recognized poets of the twentieth century, if not all time. If his name is mentioned, it is usually followed by a reference to two roads diverged in a yellow wood and taking the one less traveled by. But lurking in the shadows of the yellow wood of Frost’s poetry are much deeper meanings than are immediately apparent. As the modern poet Billy Collins says in his “Introduction to Poetry”, in order to find the true meaning of a poem we must “…hold it up to the light/ like a color slide” instead of “…beating it with a hose/ to find out what it really means” (1-16). When Frost’s poems are held up to the light, it is revealed
Several people were influences in Frost’s life. His father was a journalist but died when Frost was only ten years old. His mother then took the family to Lawrence, Massachusetts where they had recently lived for generations (Stern). All of the craftsmen jobs he had growing up influenced his later writing. He attended Harvard with the intention of teaching Latin, but he bought a poultry farm instead to live there and write poetry (Hunt 1612). When Frost married and moved to Great Britain, he met several British poets who encouraged him. Edward Thomas, who died in World War One, was one of them. The other poet he met was Ezra Pound; he also was encouraged by her. A poet named Allen Ginsberg admired Frost, even though Frost would not of approved of his poetry. English poets such as Lascelles Abercrombie and T.E. Hulme were also influences in his life (“Monkeyshines on America”). Frost was one of the first to establish and hold a university position. He also encouraged young poets by creating a summer program called Bread Loaf (Stern). Frost’s family raised poultry on a farm near Derry, New Hampshire for nine years. It influenced Frost to take ownership of the farm to
Robert Frost is one of America’s most celebrated poets. Born in 1874, he was raised in San Francisco until his father passed away. As Robert Frost grew up, many tragic things happened to him. There were many deaths in his family including some of his children. Even during these hard times, he continued to create poetry. Frost was heavily influenced by his surroundings. He loved spending time in the wilderness and observing nature. The time Robert Frost spent living New England, and his views on World War II serve as a main inspiration for his poetry.
Robert Frost (1874-1973) was born in California and, when he was eleven, his dad died. After that, the family moved to the area of New England where he wrote most of his poetry. He is a well-known American voice and his work was well appreciated. He won the Pulitzer prize for poetry four times and, in 1960, he won the Congressional Gold Medal. In addition to being decorated as a poet, his poems are beloved for their simple but universal ideas which appeal to many. Three of these universal ideas include decision-making, imagination, and the beauty of the woods.
Robert Frost is a former poet who was born in 1874 on March 26th in San Francisco, California and passed away in 1963 on January 29th. His interest in writing and reading began during high school in Lawrence. He qualified to a college in Hanover, New Hampshire, called Dartmouth College in the year of 1892. He later moved to Boston, where he attended Harvard University. Following college, he was unsure of which occupation he wanted to exhibit, but he worked as a teacher, a cobbler and an Lawrence Sentinel editor. His first poem was released in 1894 on November 8th, titled “My Butterfly” in a New York newspaper called “The Independent”.
The Poet is Robert Frost. I believe that this poem in a political affiliation poem due to the fact that it has references to many things in today's world. Frost wrote the poem when he was 48years old. He suffered a lot of grief and family tragedies. It does appear in its original language. I don't believe that it is a part of another poem, but he does have a lot of written poems similar to these topics.It feel as tho this poem is more of a political concept then a literary movement. Robert felt that the world was going to end.
Robert Frost was an American poet who was known for his realistic depictions of rural life. “Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California, to journalist William Prescott Frost, Jr., and Isabelle Moodie.”(Robert Frost - Robert Frost Biography - Poem Hunter "Robert Frost - Robert Frost Biography - Poem Hunter"). His father was known for being a hard drinking, pistol carrying, unsophisticated journalist. Isabelle Moodie, his mother, suffered from depression. Both of his parents were teachers so he was exposed to reading and writing at an early age. Frost spent only a few years of his life in California until he moved with his father. Later, his father died from tuberculous and he was moved in with his mother and one sibling, Jeanie Frost, who was two years younger.
Robert Frost was an American poet who was born in San Francisco, California, in 1874. When Frost was eleven years old, his father died, and the family moved to Massachusetts. Later, he attended Darthmouth College and then Harvard University, but he never had got an official degree (“Robert Frost”).
Frost wrote many of his best poems on several levels of meaning. He often described a natural setting with beautiful seasonal imagery connections to human beings through them. There would be a literal meaning and a deeper, more profound, meaning. Many of his poems were parables: simple stories which are meant to remind the reader of something else- perhaps more spiritual or psychological. Frost often cautioned the reader, "Don't press the poem too hard." He said, "The real meaning is the most obvious meaning." He was not a poet of obscuration. He believed a good poem did not require footnotes. Wordplay was very important to Frost, along with form and structure, but for the reader to need to stop and try to define a word, there was a chance the reader could miss the meaning of the poem. Robert Frost would not allow his poetry to be misunderstood or misread because of the use of a
“Most poets had to pay to have their poetry published in England” (The English Years of Robert Frost). Frost then met fellow poets, “Ezra Pound and Edward Thomas” (Robert Frost Bio), who decided to publish his first book of poems. However, in 1914, WWI broke out and Elinor, Frost, and the children were forced to move back to America. “All wasn’t too terrible because his popularity carried with him and he met Henry Holt, who became his new publisher and will be from here on out” (Robert Frost Bio). After making many more books of poetry and publishing more poems he and his wife then settled down on a farm they bought in Franconia, New Hampshire. Frost then taught at several different
wisdom Do you think that is true of the poems of Frost and the other
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26th in 1874. Robert Frost 's personal life was filled with grief and insecurities. When he was 11, his father died of tuberculosis, his mother died of cancer years after, and his sister was confined into a mental institution where she also later died. Elinor and Robert Frost had six children together. One of their sons died of cholera, one son committed suicide, one of their daughters died after being born due to puerperal fever, and another daughter of theirs died three days after birth. Frost 's wife developed breast cancer and died of heart failure in 1938. With all of the above listed tragedies of his loved ones and suffering from
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco California, on March 26, 1874, to his parents William Prescott Frost and Isabelle Moodie. Robert Frost’s father was a journalist, whose drinking habits led him to a young death at the age of 34 in 1885. After the death of his father, Frost’s mother moved her family to Massachusetts. Robert Frost graduate in 1892 as one of two valedictorians from Lawrence high school, the other valedictorian was Robert’s future wife Elinor Miriam White. In the 1900s Frost’s grandfather left him a farm in New Hampshire named Derry Farm. Two of his books that he wrote were “North of Boston”
As a sort of wedding gift, Frost's grandfather gave the couple a small farm in New Hampshire as a present right before his death (Burnshaw). The twelve years after the Frost family moved to the farm were the most fruitful for Frost's poetry, but it was a difficult time for him personally (Robert Frost). His firstborn son Elliot died of cholera in 1900. Frost had to wake up early every morning to write his poems and worked the farm for the rest of the day. The Frost farm failed, which sent Frost to go get another job (Burnshaw). From 1906 to 1912, Frost got a job working as a teacher at Pinkerton Academy and New Hampshire normal school (Burnshaw). During this time, Frost continued to write poetry but had little success. His attempts at getting his poem published in news journal “The Atlantic Monthly” were all denied however, as the publishers claimed that have no need for Frost's ”rigorous verse” (Burnshaw). These unfortunate turn of events unfortunately led to Frost to sell his farm and move to England with his children and wife (Burnshaw).
Robert Frost was the son of Isabelle Moodie Frost and William Prescott Frost Jr. He was born in San Francisco California and lived an unstable life there till he found stability in his adult life. He married Elinor White and started a stable lifestyle and family of his own. Frost was a teacher and a philosopher. He published his first book at the age of 39 and continued his writing career for nearly 50 years. Frost was the first poet to read at a presidential inauguration and one of the first to transform poetry and change the world of literature” (Fagan).