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Aleryani. Coach Will Rikard. British Literature. 25 January
Aleryani
Coach Will Rikard
British Literature
25 January 2017
Robert Frost
Inspired by many great ones before him, Robert Lee Frost reached the pinnacle of literary and poetic greatness. He lived a life full of suffering, lost
most of his loved ones, and even thought of suicide at one point. He loved one woman for forty years. He suffered from depression when he recited
"Twilight" to her and she demurred him. Robert Frost 's aesthetic view on the world in his poem "stopping by woods on a snowy evening" is linked to
his modernism projected in "The Road Not Taken" (Robert Frost 's concept of choice and modernism can be seen in his poems "Road Not Taken" and
"Stopping by Woods On A Snowy Evening.")
William Prescott, Frost 's father, was a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He received more than forty honorary degrees, and was even invited the inauguration of John F. Kennedy where he wrote "The Gift Outright." Gerber
Philip said this in his biography:
As Frost ponders the lot of individual man, he stresses the human being as an entity. One among many, man yet remains single and alone with his fate.
Life holds the possibility of terror and the potential of beauty. To know which it is to be, man first must educate himself. He must learn his place
among the final truths of existence. Only by knowing these varieties for what they are can he work toward acceptance of them and his own lot (Gerber).
Frost 's poems seemed like dark meditations on common unsaid thoughts; he is a modern poet that seemed ahead of his time in the standard to which
his work is inscribed with ambiguity and how abstract it was.
Frost 's poetry uniqueness is what makes it adored by most literary scholars. His poetry 's simplicity along with its ambiguity makes it so unique that
his poetry was thought to be transcendental at one point in history. He was said to have enriched his style by setting natural meters against of speech
against traditional meters. Religion to Frost was not an important factor in writing or living, in fact, he was an atheist for the longest time. He always
said that real meaning was the most obvious.
Modernism is an English genre of fiction, which
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Analysis of Acquainted with the Night and Stopping by the...
Research Paper first draft
16th Nov 2011
In a Dark Night, I Find My Answers. The two poems "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Acquainted with the Night" written by
Robert Frost are very similar to each other because of the simplistic form of language used and the uses of metaphors. When we first read the poem,
it looks like an ordinary poem but once we go in depth and understand the meaning, it becomes so much more. Both of the poem has a very dark,
gloomy and lonely setting with a really mysterious tone. There are different metaphors used in each poem to symbolize death; "Sleep" in "Stopping
By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Night" in "Acquainted with the Night." The characters in the two poem are both in a journey and has come...
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"I have walked out in rain –– and back in rain." from "Acquainted with the Night" shows the depression of the character because most of us relate to
rain as an emotional moment and makes us feel vulnerable. When it rains, the whole atmosphere becomes very gloomy and sad, and the author is
trying to express the characters sadness.
The character in "Stopping by Woods in a Snowy Evening" is a very old fashioned person because he is with a horse and rides his horse through the
woods. "My little horse must think it queer. To stop without a farmhouse near– Between the woods and frozen lake" shows how even his horse is
surprised to be stopping in the middle of the woods where there is no livelihood. It is very unusual even for the horse to stop at this hour of the
night because they should be trying to get home as soon as possible since it is already dark. "He gives his harness bells a shake. To ask if there is
some mistake." express how the horse is also very attentive about what is going on around him and his master's unusual behavior. The horse tries to
confirm with the character whether or not they have stopped in the right place.
"I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet.When far away an interrupted cry. Came over houses from another street. But not to call me back or
say good–bye," from "Acquainted With the Night" shows that the character is looking for a sign for him to look back but it was not
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The Road Not Taken And Stopping By Woods On A Snowy...
"A poem is best read in the light of all the other poems ever written... Progress is not the aim, but circulation." "Enthusiasm must be forced through the
prism of metaphor." "Griefs are not the same as grievances." "There are no two things as important to us in life and art as being threatened and being
saved... All our ingenuity is lavished on getting into danger legitimately so that we may be genuinely rescued." These prodigious quotes are all from
the aspiring poet, Robert Frost. During Frost's lifetime he was challenged with a multitude of devastating experiences. The events that he had been
challenged with contributed to the acclaimed writer he is today. This presentation will explain the difficult path Frost had to face in order to get where...
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When he states, "To stop without a farmhouse near, Between the woods and frozen lake, The darkest evening of the year," he creates a cold
atmosphere to represent death. He continues to state, "The woods are lovely, dark and deep." The dark but peaceful setting lures Frost in wanting to
stay. Even though he wants to stay, he ends up going on with his journey because he has promises to keep. This poem also represents how Frost
expresses his voice. He released all of his negative thoughts into a creative outlet, which has made him the famous writer he is
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Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, by Robert Frost Essay
Robert Frost uses metaphor and symbolism extensively in 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening', developing deeper and more complex meanings
from a superficially simple poem. Frost's own analysis contributes greatly to our appreciation of the importance of metaphor, claiming that "metaphor
[is] the whole of thinking," inviting the reader to interpret the beautiful scene in a more profound way. However, the multitude of possible
interpretations sees it being read as either carefully crafted lyric, a "suicide poem, [or] as recording a single autobiographical incident" . Judith Oster
argues, therefore, that the social conditions individual to each reader tangibly alter our understanding of metaphor. Despite the simplicity of language,...
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The issues that Frost explores are universalised by metaphor, with allusions to literary traditions such as in Hamlet's soliloquy, where the nature of life
is explored. These conflicts between our duties and the promise of "sleep" are pre–eminently relevant to both the personal dilemma faced by the
traveller but also to the reader, who is no closer to determining whether the final conclusion made is one of suicide and 'rest' or whether the "promises"
outweigh the traveller's 'intemperance' with the woods. As the poem becomes increasingly complex, the conventional metaphor of falling "snow"
contributes layer upon layer of meaning. The "downy flake" transcends its literal sense, becoming a 'blanket' that both obscures and numbs the senses,
hiding the dangers whilst tempting the traveller to stop. The coldness and darkness of the setting contrasts the purity of snow with the shadowy, even
sinister idea that nature is enticing us with eternal rest. Frost's allusions to the poem, 'Keen fitful gusts' with the line "and miles to
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Summary Of Robert Lee Frost
Name Professor Course Date Poetry Analysis Essay Robert Lee Frost was an American, highly regarded for his realistic depictions of rural life
and his command of American colloquial speech (Bloom 10). In his poems, he employs several stylistic devices that give the poem a good flow.
Frost's poems, Birches and Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening, share certain stylistic elements such as he uses rhetoric questions,
repetition, alliteration, symbolism, and imagery. In Birches, a rhetoric question is apparent where he asks, "whose words these are I think now?"
Also, in Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening, he asks, "now am I free to be poetical?" (Frost) In essence, the use of particular stylistic
devices and themes set the pace, and the mood of the poems and they communicate Frost's message in an appealingly and comprehensively to the
reader. In poem Birches, there is the use of alliteration in the last words of the fifth and sixth stanza where he states, "he gives his harness bells a
shake" (Frost). Alliteration refers to the repetition of the first letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words (Bloom 37). As
seen above, there is a repetition of the consonant 'h.' The repetition of the same sounds at the beginning of a series of words creates an interesting
rhythm that sets the pace of the poem. Frost also uses alliteration Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening to set the pace and create the mood of
the poem. The consonant "h" creates
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Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
This essay is included my own understanding, plus some information that I gathered from a lot of researches and critics' comments on this poem. I,
myself interpret this poem through the first perspective I would explain about, and in two other perspectives my ideas hardly is included.
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening"
Complete Text
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Let's analyze the poem:
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
First stanza gives us an imagery in which the speaker/Frost is far from his house to watch the beautiful falling snow. He comes with his horse to the
woods covered with snow, and is attracted by it's beauty. He is losing himself, his previous life, his previous character, as he says "I think I know". He
cannot strongly say that there are his woods and the house is his.
The line "his house is in the village, though;" is where the division lies, between village which would be "society", "civilization", "duty",
"responsibility", "sensibility"; and the woods which is beyond the borders of village and all the things it represents.
And the next line emphasize that he forgets his previous character which he had in village. The more important point that this line represents is that he
doesn't like to be seen by others; sensible people who live in the village or society, because they would disapprove and criticize his action; stopping
alone there, in the dark, in the snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
In the first two line
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Robert Frost: A Poet To Remember Essay
Robert Frost was one of America's leading 20th–century poets and a four–time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. He has been an inspiration to many young
writers and aspiring poets. Although he lived through a troubled and tragic life, Frost was able to express his unique view of nature and the world
around him in the delicate art of poetry. His direct and easy–to–read poems made him one of the most recognized poets in the country. Robert Frost
had the ability to make his poems accessible to anyone reading them. His use of everyday vocabulary and traditional form of poetry made it easy for
readers, although translating them is not as easy. Robert Frost's poems are very connotative in nature, making them very profound to read.
Frost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
A person who thinks more metaphorically might think, perhaps he is speaking of death. How he would love to stop and just wait it out, but he has
promises, and things he must fulfill before he can let go. Frost used metaphors constantly, in most of his poetry. The above is only one example, there
are many in just the one poem, В‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening'. His later poems were simpler, but still held to their metaphoric brothers.
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
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Life and Death in Thomas' Do Not Go Gentle and Frost's...
Life and Death in Thomas' Do Not Go Gentle and Frost's Stopping by Woods
"'Carpe Diem'('seize the day') is a Latin phrase which has come to denote an important literary motif especially common in lyric poetry: the
encouragement to make the most of present life while it lasts, or to 'live for the moment," (The UVic Writer's Guide). Both Robert Frost's "Stopping
by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and Dylan Thomas's "Do Not Go Gentle" explore the idea that people should attempt to live life to its fullest.
Thomas's poem, written to his father, employs a very emotional, pleading style that deeply appeals to the audience, while Frost's poem, a series of
thoughts about his own eventual death, exhibits a more pensive, practical, subtle ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is an exhortation to end with a bang instead of a whimper" (Stanford 117). The theme of "Do Not Go Gentle" appears throughout every line of the
poem. For example, in the line "Old age should burn and rave at close of day," (Thomas 2570) Thomas insists that his father not give up or "lose
heart" (Stanford 117) simply because death is approaching. "Curse, bless, me now, with your fierce tears I pray" (Thomas 2570) is "a plea for the
persistence of individuality to the end, without remission," (Stanford 117). Thomas desperately wants his father to fight his impending death, instead of
simply accepting it. Thomas attempts to raise the father?s spirits and hopes with optimistic examples of those who do not simply acquiesce to death.
Some of these examples are "wise men", "good men", "wild men", and "grave men" (Thomas 2570). Thomas wants to impress upon his father that he
has a choice to make; he can either choose to comply to death or he can fight it with all of his remaining energy.
Thomas engages an imperative, urgent tone to enthuse his father and to point out how little time the old man has left. This tone is evident throughout
the poem, but especially in the last stanza. As the poem progresses, Thomas? insistence increases; he becomes more and more frantic and determined to
convince his father to stay alive as time is running out.
Using metaphors comparing death to other objects and events, Thomas tries to make death seem less
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Robert Frost Research Paper
Robert Frost is a pastoral poet. His love for rural life revealed in his work. He incorporates major themes: one's life choices, isolation, and nature in his
works.
Robert Frost major theme incorporated in his work making life choices. For example, Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken" the persona walking
along and coming to a point where he must decide on which two paths to take: "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood/ And sorry I could not travel
both/ And be one traveler, long I stood" (Frost 1–3). This evidence proves the persona is not sure which path to take, but he knows he will soon have
to make a decision. Also, which path he take may determine ways that will change his life forever: "Two roads diverged in a wood, and I––/ I took the
one less travelled by,/ And that has made all the difference. (Frost 18–20). The persona has chosen the one path to travel, he knows years from now his
one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For instance, Robert Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" one major concern is the persona is alone: "Whose woods these are I think I
know./ His house is in the village, though;/ He will not see me stopping here" (Frost 1–3). The persona is implying that the owner of the house lives
away from the town. Also, he says "He will not see me stopping here" the persona is probably hoping the owner does not see him in his woods.
However, he rather be alone with his horse and relax in the woods: "The only other sound's the sweep/ Of easy wind and downy flake." (Frost 1–2).
Therefore, he does not want to leave the woods because it is peaceful. He enjoys the quiet woods alone. Additionally, the persona would rather be
lonesome in the freezing cold than back in the village: "The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,/ But I have promises to keep,/ And miles to go before I
sleep,/ (Frost 13–15). The persona must rest because got people and places to visit. Therefore, the persona
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Perseverance in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a...
Perseverance in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Epictetus once wrote, "First say what you would be; and then do what you have to do." This aphorism of self–discovery and obligation clearly
describes Robert Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." In the course of the poem, Frost's speaker is confronted with two choices: he
can either forget his problems or he can follow through with his responsibilities and make the most of life. It is through Frost's remarkable presentation
of the speaker's thoughts that the reader may see how difficult this decision can be. Through powerful elements, such as alliteration, rhythm, and
imagery, Frost stresses the importance of perseverence and facing one's fears and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Through clever and distant alliteration, Frost displays the importance of deciding whether to remain strong and press forward or to cowardly give up.
Despite its possibly being the more difficult path, Frost signifies the essence of perseverence through rhythm. Throughout the poem, Frost employs a
repetitive, trance–like rhythm to compliment the speaker's struggle to fight off reality and remain in his carefree world. Furthermore, Jhan Hochman
explains it as "an ingenious form of interlocking rhyme: the third unrhymed line of the first three stanzas provokes the subsequent stanza's rhymed
sound" (Hochman 4). Frost's use of rhythm is an eloquent and clever element that expresses the weak and weary state of the speaker in his moment of
a life–changing decision. Yet, in the last stanza frost brings his flowing lines to an abrupt halt with "But I have promises to keep" (Frost 13). With this
line, Frost not only shifts the meter of the poem, but also signifies the speaker's realization that he cannot give up or quit because of the life
commitments he has made. Frost powerfully uses the rhythm in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" to emphasize the importance of choosing
the path of life and all of its responsibilities instead of the easy way out.
With imagery, Frost again stresses the significance of persevering over one's fears. The
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Summary Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening By Robert...
The most publicly celebrated poet in America, did not publish his first poem until he was thirty–nine years old. Robert Frost poem "Stopping by Woods
on a Snowy Evening" includes vivid imagery of nature. Robert Frost had a traumatic, yet interesting childhood growing up. Frost also had a unique
stylistic interpretation in his poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".Robert Frost was the first born son of the newly–wed parents Belle and
Will Frost. He was named after the legendary Confederate General, Robert E. Lee. Robert Frost was born in the year of 1874 and lived an
interesting life of 88 years until his death in 1963. During Frost's early childhood, it was very confusing like all of the instability between his
parents. Frost grew up in a very unstable environment, when he reached adulthood, he searched for stability in a relationship, which he found with
who would be his future wife, Elinor. Growing up, Frost spent summers working odd jobs in California, such as helping load wagons full of wood,
raking and hoeing landscape on individual's property, and load piles of firewood. During this time Frost's mother, Belle, accepted a teaching position
in New Hampshire. Frost loved going to school up in Salem, New Hampshire. Here, he discovered a newfound love for basketball. But, unfortunately
Frost could never attend a public school for too long because of his very reactive and sensitive stomach. His stomach would cramp up at any time he
would become nervous, causing
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Robert Frost Transcendental Influences
A man so widely known that he was chosen to speak at President Kennedy's inauguration, Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874, shortly after the
Transcendental movement in America (Robert Frost). Frost is considered as one of the best known poets in American history, having won many
awards such as the Pulitzer Prize for his amazing works of poetry. Frost's works formed as a bridge between 19th and 20th century poetry (Robert Frost
). He is well known for using a distinct form of rhythm and using a New England dialect in his poems. The career for one of the most famous poet
almost did not start at all, Frost's writings were at first shot down, as a result of this, he traveled to England and became a huge success. After his
success in England he returned to the United States and became a huge success in America as well. (Robert Frost) Frost was known as a poet who had
many different influences in his work. One of these influences was Transcendentalism.
Transcendentalism was a movement in the 1830's that have strong beliefs in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The transcendental influence can best be seen in the lines "Two roads diverged in a wood, and I – I took the one less traveled by, And that has made
all the difference." Transcendentalism has an emphasis on nonconformity, and the man walking the road, took the one less traveled. By taking the road
less traveled the man is not following the path that normal society would take. The man is using his own reasoning and thought, and has chosen to
take a different path than the others. Frost has said that this poem can have many interpretations and meanings, and that it is a very tricky poem. Some
believe that the sign is a sigh of satisfaction, while others do believe it is a sigh of regret, not knowing what he has missed from the other path. There
are also other examples of Frost using transcendentalism in his
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Mending Wall Analysis
Both "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" share a common theme of man in nature. This theme is illustrated by setting
of both poems. The setting of "Mending Wall" takes place in between two orchards divided by a wall, which leads to the main conflict of the
poem. The setting of "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" sets up the poem on the edge of the woods on the side of the road while the
speaker is on their way to a farmhouse. The nature is shown by the use of imagery when Frost writes in "Mending Wall" that "He is all pine and I
am apple orchard" (24). This remains constant throughout the poem like in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" where the speaker says, "He
will not see me stopping here / To watch his woods fill up with snow" (3–4). This illustrates how nature can be eye–catching and admirable since the
speaker stops what he is doing just to look into the woods, he had to have seen something that caught his eye and made the stop one worth making.
The theme of mystery is also present in both poems and is present in "Mending Wall" through the role of the neighbor and the wall itself, and in
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" through the role of the woods. In "Mending Wall" the speaker does not see the need in for a wall while
the neighbor does. The speaker would question the neighbor but they would never get a concrete answer the speaker claims "I could say 'Elves' to
him, / but it's not elves exactly, and I'd rather / He said it for
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Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, By...
Robert Frost is a great American poet that mastered the art of eloquently imprinting his readers with an overarching idea, or theme, through his use of
symbolic language, precise picture painting, and metronome rhyme and meter. Frost addresses many different themes across his poems, but sometimes
has similar methods of displaying his themes; three of the most prominent are the crossroads of a decision in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening," the battle between desire and hate in "Fire and Ice," and the loss of innocence in "Nothing Gold Can Stay."
"Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" is all about the internal debates that occur when making a decision. The poem is designed to "unsettle
certitude" as Guy Rotella, a literary critic, put ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The connection between Earth and a relationship is a little more subtle since he does not outright say it, but due to fire and ice being connected to
emotions that come from the "world" of a relationship the reader can assume their connection to the "world" in the poem. "Fire and Ice" also draws
on Frost's tendency to "unsettle certitude" since, as Guy Rotella put it, he concludes with a point that ends up reopening what he had already closed
earlier in the poem (253). Frost once again never makes a decision in this poem, he just uses the metaphor to debate with himself on why either desire
or hate could be the one to destroy a relationship. Similarly to "Fire and Ice," Robert Frost also uses an extended metaphor to show the theme in
"Nothing Gold Can Stay." Frost tells the story of how the most beautiful part of Spring only lasts a short time in couplets of iambic trimeter, and it
is not until line six until the true meaning of this poem is exposed, "So Eden sank to grief" (Frost). This is alluding to the "Garden of Eden" story
from the Bible when mankind was banished from the garden; which also reveals the reasoning for personifying Spring earlier in the poem by saying
gold was "Her Hardest hue to hold" (Frost, 2). Frost wants the reader to connect mankind's falling from the
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Robert Frost Contributions
Robert Frost is a rare twentieth century poet, that may be the most recognized name in poetry. He won the Pulitzer Prize a total of four times,
which is more than any other poet. Some of his best work includes: "The Road Not Taken", "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Robert Frost
was a literary legacy. When he was 87 years old, he was asked to write and recite a poem for President John F. Kennedys inauguration. During Robert
Frosts lifetime, he received over 40 honorary degrees and of course his four Pulitzer Prizes. Robert Frosts life was reflected in his poetry in a variety of
ways. Robert Frost was raised in New England, and many of his poems characters and settings are based in New England. Robert Frost was also
greatly influenced by emotions and events in everyday life. He could take every day events such as: watching ice weigh down birch tree branches,
the mowing of fields of hay or even the mending of stories on a wall and perceives a deeper meaning to love, hate, or conflict. These writing
techniques lead to another reason as to why Robert Frost is so successful. Many of his poems, such as, "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on
a Snowy Evening" are inspired by the natural world. In 1897, Frost began studying at Harvard. This really helped Robert Frost become an intellectual
and more of a serious poet. Unfortunately, after two years he had drop out of school. He then became a chicken farmer, which helped familiarize him
with farming and rural life. This
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Robert Frost Wrote The Revered Poem, “Stopping By Woods
Robert Frost wrote the revered poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" at his home in Shaftsbury, Vermont in 1922. It appeared in his fifth
collection of poems entitled, "New Hampshire," published in 1923, which won his first Pulitzer Prize. In this poem, the reader is privy to a few
moments of the thoughts of a man who pauses in the silence and solitude of the winter woods. It's a poem with such simplicity that a child can
commit it to memory and such complexity that scholars repeatedly explicate it. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is a closed form, lyric
poem that's written in iambic tetrameter, containing a total of eight syllables in each line. It has four quatrains that follow the rhyme scheme aaba,
bbcb, ccdc, dddd. The... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Having experienced his first success in London, he returned to New Hampshire where his work continued to reflect the scenes and values of
nature he experienced there. In 1947, Frost spoke of the poem to a student at a reading he was giving at Bowdoin College. When asked which of
his poems his favorite was, Frost replied, "I'd have to say 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' is that poem" (Bleau 175). Continuing, he
revealed the inspiration for the verse was a personal experience he had just before Christmas in 1905. Frost failed to sell his produce at the local
market and had no money for gifts for his children. As he neared his home on that snowy evening, he stopped his wagon. Overwhelmed, he cried in
frustration. Beginning with the title, Robert Frost sets the scene and topic for the poem: an informal, spontaneous "stopping by" a private wooded
spot during a snowfall at the end of a day. The narrator's progression of thought during his contemplation is seen in each stanza. In the first stanza, the
speaker thinks about the owner of the woods. He considers he might know who the woods belong to, but he is not certain. Even though, he knows the
owner lives in town and is not nearby. So, he won't see the traveler, or trespasser. The narrator is safe and alone in his brief
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How Did Robert Frost's Influence His Work?
"In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: It goes on." (Google Images). This quote has touched many as have numerous of
the literary masterpieces by the man who said it. Robert Frost is one of the best known poets of the 19th Century having created numerous works of
art throughout his lifetime. His poems are often quoted in shows and movies and always thought of when trying to describe something naturally
beautiful. Frost's life had a huge impact on his writing as did the period in which he wrote his poems. One of his most famous pieces "Stopping by
Woods on a Snowy Evening" is the perfect example of how easily one could be swayed with his in depth descriptions of natural scenery with a dark
twist. Robert Frost's work was inspired by his adulthood spent on a farm ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California. He lived there for 12 years with his mother, Isabelle Moodie, and his father
William Prescott Frost Jr., who died of tuberculosis when Robert was only 12. His mother then moved him and his sister, Jeanie, to Lawrence,
Massachusetts. Frost met his wife, Elinor White, at Lawrence High School when they were the co– Valedictorian's of their class. After they married
they moved to a farm in New Hampshire which was the setting of many of his poems.They then had 6 children, two of which died shortly after birth
and two had mental illnesses. Having had so many traumatizing events within his family life, his writing was greatly influenced. After the death of two
of his children his poems started getting a much deeper meaning. A good example of this would be "Home Burial" which is
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We Grow Accustomed To The Walk
People have different types of lifestyle, personality, thoughts, careers, and choices, but in the world, there are only a few people who have similar
thoughts, ideas, and a passion for writing such as Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost. These poets express their emotions and feelings, in their
poems. In this paper I will compare two poems by Dickinson "We Grow Accustomed to the Dark" and "A Bird came down the Walk," and two
poems by Frost, "Acquainted with the Night" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," the history of the authors, and their similarities and
differences. Dickinson was born 1830, in Amherst, MA, in USA ("Dickinson"). Frost was born in San Francisco, California, in 1874 (Hard). Both
authors lived in the same time periods,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost wrote many poems about their emotions and the darkness that they faced or in their childhood or adult life.
Dickinson writes about darkness because she always stayed in her house; she did not leave her house and she did not see the light of the sky in her
life (Tredell). "We Grow Accustomed to the Dark," by Emily Dickinson, is about the darkness and hopelessness. This poem has a deeper meaning
about people who have to face all kinds of struggle or problems in their life. The poet writes, "When light is put away– As when the Neighbor holds
the Lamp" (Dickinson "We Grow," 2–3). This means that sometimes it's tough to solve a problem, but there is always hope to solve any kind of
problem. All kinds of struggle can help one to learn about the struggle and also to get experiences to solve these problems or struggles again in the
future. "Acquainted with the Night," by Robert Frost, is about a person who is walking alone in the rain. He is approached by a cop (watchman)
and the speaker looks down and walks away from a cop. The author mentions, "And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain" (Frost "Acquainted," 6).
This quote means that speaker does not make eye contact with the cop because he does not want to explain to the cop what he is doing outside at the
night time. "I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet. When far away an interrupted cry" (Frost "Acquainted," 7–8) this quote explains while the
speaker is walking, he hears, someone crying in one of the houses on the street. "But not to call me back or say good–bye" (Frost "Acquainted," 10)
this explains that the speaker does not want to see who is crying; however; he ignores that crying sound and walks away from it. "I have looked
down the saddest city lane" (Frost "Acquainted," 4) this proves that the speaker in the poem is very depressed. The speaker is lonely or maybe the
speaker is
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Robert Frost Poetry Analysis
The works of poet Robert Frost are in fact famous for his time, because they impacted the world of poetry. Though his poems bring the theme of
nature, there is more to his rich poetry. His poems shape an image of life and how life interacts with the surrounding environment. Robert Frost's
two poems "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "After Apple Picking," talk about the reality of life by telling the story of a person in
their early life compared to a person at the end of life. Some believe that Frost uses nature in his poems to construct an image of the surroundings.
Nitika Grover mentions, "...Ecocriticism shows the linkage between nature and life." (Grover 1). Grover explains that there is a factor of nature to
Frost's work, but his poems go much deeper than the essence of nature. Nature plays a role in the poems, but it can't explain the concept of time
throughout. The concept of nature is the main overall theme, but Carol Frost puts it, "Frost poems work to an absolute truth that becomes an involved
process of thought, feeling, ideas, will, and judgement." (Frost 2). Frost here mentions that the poems are seen with characteristics such as judgment.
Frost's poems show an overall topic of nature and he presents these as thoughts. The ideas of characteristics veers from the idea of time shown in
Frost's poems. The perspective Frost is coming at is that nature creates a presentation of ideas instead of a representation of time. Frost uses passing
time between
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Examples Of Human Tension By Robert Frost
Inner Human Tension
Robert Frost accurately captures the conflicted nature of human beings using nature imagery with underlying meanings. In "Stopping by Woods on a
Snowy Evening," Frost depicts a peaceful landscape in order to explain the pull humans experience to both fulfill worldly responsibilities and also
follow their own wishes, while in "Neither Out Far nor In Deep" Frost describes human fascination with the the sea, but also notes that humans belong
on land, and are unable to truly understand the aspects they admire in the water. In these poems, aspects of the natural world represent human
desires that are inherent, while influences due to society symbolize the limitations of humans. In this way, Frost also compares the tension humans
feel when caught between civilization and wilderness to the strain caused by the mix of hopelessness and yearning. Frost emphasizes aspects of
the winter imagery of "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" as symbols for the conflict between duty and desire in the speaker's mind.
Initially, the thought of the owner of the woods reminds the speaker of society, and provides a temporary motivation for him to fulfill his
obligations; then he again becomes lost in the description of his setting. The speaker continues elaborating on the woods he must leave until the
sound of his horse's bells remind him of his responsibility. He then yields once more to his longing to stay in the woods, conveyed in his
interpretation of winter weather as comforting. The image of "downy" snow (Frost 12) is reminiscent of pillows, and the phrase "easy wind" (Frost
12) reveals the speaker's belief that the woods are a simpler environment than the one he is obligated to return to. The final stanza reveals the speaker's
inner tension most evidently, with his clearest statement of admiration for nature, "The woods are lovely" (Frost 13), followed by his firmest rebuff;
"But I have promises to keep" (Frost 14). The dichotomy Frost accentuates by detailing nature so reverently, then interjecting reminders of duty and
society serves to underline the tension felt by humans, whose nature is caught between duty and desire. Frost captures a similarly contradictory aspect of
human nature in
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Summary Of Stopping By The Woods On A Snowy Evening By...
Robert Frost has written many poems. In this specific poem ВЁStopping By The Woods On A Snowy EveningВЁ Frost develops an ideal theme
through the usage of symbolism, imagery, and different types of figurative language.
In this poem Frost uses symbolism to convey a central idea or theme. Through the use of symbolism he opens up the readers minds to focus on the
message of the poem, Frost uses these symbols to get the readers thinking about the presented idea of life's journey. Frost uses words as a symbol of life.
Frost this is the Webster my present life because what are full of things that are undiscovered new teachings and they will eventually end, but you
have to get through them first. This relates back to life because there is an end and beginning. We also have to get through part of our lives before
it comes to an end. Also as we live we explore new things and we learn new things another symbol frost uses is snow. In this poem the snow
symbolizes death snow is used in the way that the words are filling up and coming to an end. Since the word represents life the snow is feeling of
the words meaning it's comic life is coming closer to death. Just like as we journey through life will become older learn more we also become closer
and closer to death each day. Frost uses the snow in this way to show that the words are filling up with more snow as the journey continues and that
this so–called journey well at some point come to an end. Frost uses the symbols to develop a
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Snow Bound By John Greenleaf Whittier
Snow Bound" by John Greenleaf Whittier and "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost, both have several representations of
imagery and imagination. Throughout both poems, the authors use imagery to connect to the reading senses and imagination to allow the reader to
appeal to their own senses. "Snow Bound", a poem describing the joyous day for a boy who experienced snow for the first time. Author, John
Greenleaf Whittier uses imagery perfectly. "The blue walls of the firmament, no cloud about, no earth below–a universe of sky and snow." The author
describes the setting of the poem by his use of rich and creative imagery. Robert Frost also shows his touch of imagery in the poem, "Stopping by the
Woods on a Snowy Evening".
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Similarities Between Birches And Birches
During his life, Robert Frost, the icon of American literature, wrote many poems that limned the picturesque American landscape. His mostly
explicated poems "Birches" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" reflect his young manhood in the rural New England. Both of these poems
are seemingly straightforward but in reality, they deal with a higher level of complexity and philosophy. Despite the difference in style and message,
"Birches" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are loaded with vivid imagery and symbolism that metaphorically depict the return to nature
and childhood, the struggle between reality and imagination and also life and death.
Frost wrote "Birches" in a blank verse structure, but "Stopping by Woods" is basically ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The playful boy in "Birches" is imaginary, he clearly represents a younger version of Frost himself. The boy enjoyed swinging the birch trees by
"riding them over and over again / until he took the stiffness out of them"(30–31). This visual image illustrates the victory of the poet in moving to his
own imaginary world; an ambiguous catastrophic world that he allows himself to attain without any boundaries. Consequently, Frost draws an
extremely strong image of ice "shattering and avalanching" on the snowy ground till a point "you'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen"(13).
The pliable quality of the birch authorized the poet to become released. In "The Study Guide on Robert Frost's Birches", it is claimed that "this line
(13) signals the beginning of a retreat from reality" (Poetry for Students, Vol. 13). In addition, comparing the birches in the ice storm to "girls on
hands and knees that throw their hair" (19) symbolizes the captive position of the speaker who is getting older as the birches, year after year. Even
though the poet feels free when he is a swinger of birches, he reached a statement that "Earth is the right place for love" (53); climbing the trees and
knowing about coming back again is an example of escape and transcendence towards
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Robert Frost
Robert Frost has been described as an ordinary man with a deep respect for nature, talking to ordinary people. To what extent do you agree with this
view?
Poetry is a literary medium which often resonates with the responder on a personal level, through the subject matter of the poem, and the techniques
used to portray this. Robert Frost utilises many techniques to convey his respect for nature, which consequently makes much of his poetry relevant to
the everyday person. The poems "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' and "The mending wall" strongly illuminate Frost's reverence to nature and
deal with such matter that allows Frost to speak to ordinary people.
On the surface, "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" deals with a seemingly ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, when the responders' delves deeper into the poem, it is clear that at a allegorical level the wall is a metaphor representing the barrier that
exists in the neighbours' friendship. The first eleven lines of the poem if rife with imagery that describes the dilapidation of the wall. The first line of
the poem emphasises that "something" exists that "doesn't love a wall". This personification makes the "something" seem human–like. The use of
words such as "spills" and "makes gaps" convey an image of animate actions and create a vivid impression of the degradation of the wall. Nature,
presented in the form of cold weather, frost and the activities of creatures, also seeks to destroy the wall. The idea that walls are unnatural and
therefore nature abhors walls is portrayed in the phrase "makes gaps even two can pass abreast", which metaphorically indicates that nature desires
for man to walk side by side with no barrier between them. When the two meet to fix the wall, it is a metaphor that could be interpreted as the two
repairing their friendship as "To each the boulders have fallen to each" which shows that faults in their relationship lie on behalf of them both. While
they are mending the wall, a light–hearted tone is established. This is shown through the inclusion of the metaphor "spring is mischief in me" which
shows the neighbours having fun together in repairing the wall,
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Analysis Of Harlem By Langston Hughes
"Harlem" by Langston Hughes explains the importance of following your dreams. In the poem, Hughes explains that if you ignore a dream it will
slowly get less and less appealing to you until it goes away completely. Hughes writes, "What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin
in the sun?" (Lines 1–3). Langston Hughes uses this simile to explain to the reader that your ambitions can't be forgotten about because they will
deteriorate and turn into nothing. Hughes also says, "Or fester like a sore and then run? Does it stink like rotten meat?" (Lines 4–6). In this
comparison, Hughes uses a sore and rotten meat to show the reader that a dream that is neglected can fill you with regret until you cannot take it
anymore. If you ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Harlem" can change the way the reader thinks about their future and even change the way they live their life. Millions of people struggle with trying
to find a reason to follow one of their dreams, but Hughes explains several in "Harlem".
"Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost is about the loneliness and darkness in his own life. Frost uses the woods in the story as
a way to portray his current situation in life. In the poem Frost writes, "The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but I have promises to keep, and miles to
go before I sleep..." (Lines 13–15). Frost describes the woods as dark and desolate which is a metaphor for how he feels in life. He explains how
they are far from town and there isn't anyone near him. This could mean he keeps himself guarded from others to avoid getting hurt or hurting others.
In "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" Frost writes, "Between the woods and frozen lake the darkest evening of the year" ( Lines 7–8).
Frost compares a dark evening with the darkness and sadness in his life, saying that right now he is as depressed as he has every been.
"Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" is similar to "Harlem" by Langston Hughes because both poems stress the point that everyone will
enjoy life more if they do the things that make them happy. Hughes and Frost use metaphors and similes to show the outcome of an unaccomplished
life. "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" is
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Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snow Evening By Robert...
As time goes on, society becomes more and more disconnected from nature. With each year that passes new gadgets are put onto the market.
Technology has recently released a device known as a virtual reality headset. This is for those who want to see the world without actually taking a
step outside. Technology has become the forefront of people's lives. In his eye opening poem, "Stopping By Woods on a Snowing Evening",Robert
Frost addresses the idea that nature is a blessing that should be appreciated, not ignored, and seen for its true beauty. In order to convey the meaning of
his poem, Frost includes elements such as relaxing language, vivid imagery, and an appreciative tone.
If one looks close enough, they are sure to find serenity in nature. One element the speaker presents to showcase the beauty of nature is relaxing
language.The words the poet incorporates create a calm and still feeling. The only sound in these vacant woods is the "sweep of easy wind and
downy flake." The words "easy" (12), "sweep" (12), and "downy" (12) have a quiet sense to them. The speaker could have described the winds as
howling or as something a little more harsh. Instead, he characterizes them as an easy breeze with a smooth whisper to them. He then describes the
falling of the snow as a soft and slow descend. Words such as these are typically associated with situations that are calm and quiet. They are words
that are simply spoken and easily recognized as soothing. By describing the scene before the speaker with words such as these, the persona shows
readers the beauty and simplicity of nature.
The speaker furthermore conveys the idea that nature is a grandeur that should be recognized by including the element of imagery. The poet
utilizes imagery as a technique to appeal to reader's sense of sight . It is "the darkest evening of the year" (line 8) and a traveller and his horse stop
"between the woods and frozen lake" (line 7). By writing with details such as these, readers are capable of effortlessly envisioning the peaceful
scenery that lies before the speaker. The persona then draws on reader's sense of sound. "The only other sound's the sweep / Of easy wind and downy
flake." The illustration allows readers to not only see,
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Many Choices In The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost
Bailey Bolling
Instructor Cheryl Remmers
English 1020 CRN 13913
6 December 2017
Life's Many Choices Robert Frost is a well–known poet; his writing is famous for its simplicity with a more in–depth meaning than what he has
written down. In his poems, there is usually a choice someone must make, and these decisions represent real–life situations that most people are facing.
The choices that are made could drastically change one's life. "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are two of Frost's
poems that are about making choices. Frost makes it easy to relate to the poems because they apply to everyday life. "The Road Not Taken" talks
about the significance of one's choices, and "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" talks about how a man is readying himself for the inevitable, he
is reflecting on his past choices that he has made and how it has affected him. These two poems provide us with an outlook on decisions made in real
life situations; "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" teach us to think before we make decisions because it could
end up changing one's life. In "The Road Not Taken" and in "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" each speaker must make a choice, that could
forever change their lives. Both speakers are alone and seem to be feeling indecisive. They both seem intrigued by nature's beauty, in "The Road Not
Taken" it is the "yellow wood" and in "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" it is "the woods fill up with
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Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening By Robert Frost
Poetry in All Its Forms
Poetry's stellar form allows people to creatively observe the boundaries of depth. Forms of poetry are equal in difficulty; a portion of humankind
might consider a sonnet difficult, in contrast others find it to be elementary. A poem I admire is called "stopping by woods on a snowy evening" by
Robert Frost (Frost, R. 1922). As I marvel at the simplicity of this poem, I find it no wonder that it's considered a masterpiece with the words so
beautifully painted inside the text. I would consider this poem to be rhyming/free verse . Poetry conforms to its own set of rules; however, rules in free
verse are exiguous. Free verse carries the weight of the writer's mind, while the writer creates their own rules. It allows one the freedom to conduct
the poem however one wishes. Writing free verse challenges my brain to complete multiple forms, assimilating creative juices. Free verse allows
oneself to express one's soul, but if you take, for example, a haiku or a senryu that restriction makes the poem difficult to write. A haiku is difficult to
master perfectly, although it is my favorite form of poetry. In poetry, imagery is required to be painted with a pen; it is essential that the reader
observe what the author's imagination is showing. In conducting an interview with Ben Pickard, on a poetry site I have frequented since I started
writing poetry, he expresses that he enjoys writing new types of poetry and his favorite is the sonnet. When asked
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Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Robert Frost is known for his layering poetry that includes unique characters for the audience to enjoy. He, "always wants to reach for a more
complicated vision, one arrived at after much pain, much "sucking up" of passive, reflected beauty" (Panini 235). This quote about Frost suggests that
his writing flourishes in the face of uncomfortable subject matter, a quality most ordinary people do possess. However, Frost is not trying to steer the
audience toward his way of thinking, he is simply telling us that the characters we sense in the text will have bold personalities, also known as
persona. An illustration of this writing strategy is present in Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," from the 1928 collection,
West–Running Brook. Here, Frost creates a good example of a Rubaiyat stanza that is broken into four sections totaling sixteen lines. From the
moment we meet the narrator, we are aware that his persona is suspicious, from his inspections of the winter surrounding, to the focus on his odd
behavior and the final reminder of a plan. What "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" deeply concerns is found in the fresh behaviors and subtle
hints that the narrator presents to the reader. Due to Frost's skillful delivery of narrator's persona in this poem, the topic of suicidal thoughts is
presented to the audience in an attempt to create awareness about this life threatening condition. In a strategic move by Frost, he presents us with an
unreliable
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Robert Frost Imagery
Robert Frost is an English poet who wrote several poems during the 1900's. His poems include "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on
a Snowy Evening". Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is literally about a person who stops in the woods on the night of December
21st or the winter solstice. The owner of the woods lives in the village so he will not see the speaker. When the speaker stops and looks into the
woods, his horse shakes his bells. However, the speaker wants to stay in the woods, but he has miles to ride before he can go to sleep. Through his
use of imagery, figure of speech, and sound effects, Frost illustrates the influences of life and death in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".
Frost uses several images to portray the ideas of life and death. For example, Frost writes "to watch his woods fill up with snow" (Frost l. 4). ... Show
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In this poem, the rhyme scheme AABA remains constant for the first three stanzas. In the fourth stanza, the rhyme scheme changes from AABA to
AABB. The last line is repeated. Frost, wants the reader to understand the importance of "miles to go before I sleep". Frost repeats this line of poetry
because he wants the reader to see that people must fulfill their responsibilities before they die. In this line, miles mean years, and sleep means death.
The speaker has more years to live before he dies. Another example of sound effects is Frost's use of alliteration in the form of "only other" and
"sound's the sweep" (Frost l. 11) in the line "the only other sound's the sweep/ of easy wind and downy flake" (Frost ll. 11–12). This line is very
soothing to the reader and implies that death is silent. Then Frost adds "of easy wind and downy flake" (Frist l.12). This sound effect is assonance, as
one can hear the breeze of the wind and the snow falling to the ground. These two sounds represent the ideas of death slowly
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Comparison of Toadstool Wood and Snowy Wood
'The toadstool wood' describes a woodland at twilight. Everything is quiet and dark. Reeves describes the woods as if it is hoary and inactive, I
know this because in the poem he says 'mouldy'. He also says 'arching sprays of bramble' which means there would be alot of cultivation as well in
the wood. On the other the poem, 'stopping by Woods on a snowy evening' has the setting of a man on horse back stopping by the woods for a rest
when he is on a long journey. Frost describes these woods as if it is glacial and gloomy, I know this because in the poem he says 'The darkest evening
of the year'. This would also means that it is frightening. There are many common things between these two poems. Firstly both poems scenes are set in
the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The narrator knows the owner of the woods and knows where he lives but then he says, 'he will not see me stopping here'. Why will the owner of
the woods not see the narrator stopping by? Then the narrator says 'my little horse must think it queer, to stop without a farmhouse near', so that
means his horse thinks it is very odd, to stop when there is no farmhouse near. So why did the narrator stop then? This is another example of the
mystery the poem evokes. The author describes the woods as if it is very scary. I know this because he says 'the woods are lovely, dark and deep'. I
think he was being sarcastic when he said 'lovely'. 'Dark and deep' would mean that the woods had a lack of light and that it was very big and you
could get lost in it. In this poem the narrator still has miles to travel in his journey because on the last two lines he says 'and miles to go before I
sleep'. Where is the narrator's destination? This poem has an AABArhyme scheme. Frost has added alliteration 'dark and deep' and he uses
onomatopoeia 'the only other sound's the sweep, of easy wind and downy flake.' Overall this poem created a more powerful sense of mystery than the
toadstool wood, which means it has created more suspense. I can see more mystery in this poem other than toadstool wood. I have given examples.
Both poems employ striking imagery to create a powerful sense of place. Reeves describes the toadstool wood as an isolated quite place,
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Engl. 102 Poetry Essay
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" a Review
English 102
Liberty University
4/21/2014
Poetry Thesis and Outline
While reviewing "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", it should be noted that the key is the rhythm of the language. The first, second, and fourth
sentence rime while the third sentence of each rimes with the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd sentence of the next stanza. In relation with the cryptic language draws
the question, there is a more sinister back drop of loneliness and depression in this poem much deeper than the level of nature orated by the Narator. I.
First Stanza
A. Frost opens with describing who's woods we are viewing
1. Does it matter who's woods
B. No one is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Frost further points out that the stretch of woods being viewed is very rural. This is made possible by the reference to the location between the woods
and frozen lake. In closing the final sentence of the second stanza Frost reiterates the fact that this occurs on "the darkest evening of the year" stating
the darkness of the mood.
In the following stanza Frost returns to the horse, which "gives his harness bells a shake". This is the first of only two sounds listed in the entire
poem. Sounds might normally be associated with a person in a lighter more jovial mood. Frost uses the lack of sound to put the narrator into what
appears to be a deep process of thought. As the poem moves further allon it is clear that Frost is not thinking of other sounds or even the feelings which
would be associated with this type of event. There is no mention of the temperature only the implication of the snow falling, and the frozen lake. Yet the
sounds are slightly present, similar to an athlete who is preparing for the event. Frost is quiet, internalizing his thoughts, focusing on the task at hand,
and not sensing the other areas of life in the world around him.
In the fourth and final stanza Frost uses the riming of all four sentences to draw the reader into the climax of the poem, "the woods are lovely dark and
deep/ But I have promises to keep/ and miles to go before I sleep/ and miles to go before I sleep". This grouping leads the reader to feel that
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Essay Biography of Robert Frost
"Rightly or wrongly, Robert Frost has achieved a reputation as a poet of nature..." (Gerber 155). Yes, Frost does use imagery of nature in his poems,
but to say he is a "nature poet" is distorting his poetry by overlooking the poem's darker complexions (Gerber 155). An aspect of his poems that is
frequently overlooked is the main character's internal conflict. In "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping By Woods On A
Snowy Evening" characters are faced with an inner conflict metaphorically described by nature. In these two poems Frost uses nature to hide the reality
of how self–conscious the main character actually is.
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874.
When his father died in 1885 he moved to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He spoke in the
Yankee idioms of theNew England area (Michalowski). "Mention the poetry of Robert Frost to anyone...and images of idyllic New England scenes
come to mind: cobbled streets that shine in the moonlight, a sleigh ride in winter woods..." (De Fusco 13) but " he is more than a
New England poet: he is more than an American poet; he is a poet who can be understood anywhere..." (Van Doren).
In all of Robert Frost's poetry there is a use of metaphor. "
'Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening'...is about self
–consciousness...about a man turned from nature by the demands of a man–made world"
(Wakefield). The major problem of the poem is why the speaker pauses by the woods. The answer is the lure of the dark, impenetrable, snow–filled
woods is at once the lure of beauty and the lure of death (Sweeny and Lindroth 52). All of these problems are taking place within the main characters
head.
The scene of "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" is a cold, snowy evening in early winter. The man in the story is looking around his
neighbor's woods with his horse (Sweeny and Lindroth 50). As soon as the poem begins "there are conflicts set up in the first and second stanzas.
"The first conflict is between the poet and the owner of the woods [...] the second conflict is between the poet and his horse"
(Sweeny and Lindroth 51). These conflicts are all divided into three different sections of the poem (De Fusco 93).
In the first section, a man is in the
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Robert Frost
A Snowy Evening with Robert Frost Robert Frost once said, "It begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a loneliness. It is
never a thought to begin with. It is at best when it is a tantalizing vagueness." ("Poetry Foundation" n.d.). This poem holds a lot of mystery in its
meaning which has a variety of interpretations. John T. Ogilvie who wrote, "From Woods to Stars: A pattern of Imagery inRobert Frost's Poetry"
interprets this as a poem about the journey through life. James G. Hepburn who wrote, "Robert Frost and His Critics" took a different approach. He
believes this poem to be about the aesthetics and moral action. This poem contains a variety of literary devices that not only describe the scenery but ...
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As Hepburn says in his article, "Robert Frost and His Critics" "The mood that the poem induces in the reader nullifies his acceptance of the
intention expressed by the traveler. The sum of the reader's experience of the poem is different from the meaning of the traveler's experience of the
woods. Presumably the traveler goes home to supper, to his duties, and to the rest of his journey through life; but these things are not the poem."
Frost made some comments on the factors mood plays in a poem, "... the poet's intention is of course a particular mood that won't be satisfied with
anything less than its own fulfillment." (Hepburn 1962). This poem isn't a recreated experience but meant to be an experience in itself. This poem has
some interesting symbolism in it takes us on a journey through a man's life. When the narrator first stops, instead of questioning himself, he questions
what the horse thinks, "My little horse must think it queer" (842). By questioning the horse, he is really questioning his own reasons, which people
often do while they make life decisions or everyday decisions. The horse is also a symbol of time the horse is questioning his stopping and urges him
to move on to prevent the further loss of time (Anonymous). When the narrator's horse shakes his harness bells, he then becomes a symbol, as John
Ciardi thinks, "..order of life that does not understand why a man stops in the winter middle of nowhere to watch snow come
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Snow Imagery in “Desert Places” and “Stopping by Woods on...
Robert Frost (1874– 1963). Robert Frost "was the most widely admired and highly honoured American poet of the 20th century (Eiermann)." Robert
Frost was raised in rural New England where he grew a fond love for the outdoors and nature (Merriman). His love with nature elements has probably
overwhelmed him so much that it has been reflected upon in many of his poems such as "The Tuft of Flowers," "Reluctance," and "Birches." One of
the nature imageries that have been used frequently by Robert Frost is the snow imagery. Although the snow imagery appears in many other poems
by Frost we will be dealing with the poems "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." Even though "Desert Places" and "Stopping
by Woods on a Snowy... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is also because of the mysteriousness of the woods being "lovely, dark, and deep (Frost, Stopping., line 13)" that makes the speaker mesmerized.
The snow in this poem gave the speaker calmness by the woods and gives the poem the mood of welcome and mysteriousness whereas in "Desert
Places" the snow establishes the mood of loneliness and emptiness. Therefore, if the snow imagery made the mood of the poems different, then
evidently the snow imagery will make the themes of the two poems different as well.
From the different manipulations of the snow imagery on the moods in "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" it made their
themes distinctly different from each other. The snow that surrounded the speaker in "Desert Places" made the field look like an open, empty, lonely
place. It is from the surroundings that the speaker creates his own loneliness. From this, it is clear that the speaker's loneliness inside himself/ herself
overwhelms them so much that it causes their outlook to be of only loneliness. So in "Desert Places" the theme is that the loneliness that is created
from within of the speaker causes him/her to realize or see the loneliness that is inside them and also the loneliness that surrounds them, which is nature.
In "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Robert Frost 's `` Stopping By Woods On A...
Robert Frost was an American poet born on March 26, 1874. Living to the age of eighty eight, Frost was able to become an accomplished poet in his
lifetime, creating beautiful works of art through his words. In many of his poems one can find similar themes that discuss intense feelings and ideas
about isolation and loneliness in one's life, such as in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Mending Wall". Each of the following poems
discussed will demonstrate that throughout Robert Frost's poetry one can find an overarching theme of loneliness and isolation for the speaker. As
the case with many writers, their inspiration and shared themes between works can be related back to their life events and struggles. In the case of
Robert Frost this rings true. "Born in San Francisco, his mother suffered from broken family and depression, and his father was an alcoholic.
(Brown). In addition to this: "because his father was a violent drunk, Frost as a child witnessed the fury and rage of his father on a regular basis... [to a
point where] William became brutal, smashing furniture and yelling. It was not an unusual occurrence for Isabelle to run into the streets with her
children to find refuge in the home of a neighbor" (Dreese).
These factors could play a key role to the themes of isolation and loneliness in his poetry because they directly reflect the life events of Frost.
Growing up with a violent and alcoholic father along with a depressed mother could not be easy
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Use of Literary Devices in Robert Frost's Stopping by...
The Use of Literary Devices in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening In Robert Frost's poem. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening." the speaker uses literary devices to show the reader the poem's meaning. Symbolism plays an important role in this poem. Robert Frost
uses symbolism to show the correlation between the woods and village with heaven. Mythological symbolism is also found in this poem. when the
speaker talks about the lake. it is a reference to Hel in Norse Mythology. The tone of the poem, and Robert Frost's syntax. portray a tranquil yet dark
feeling throughout the poem. The observations made exhibit how the speaker views life and death. The personification of the horse shows how the
horse is important... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
and his conscience does not think that this thought is normal. The farm house represents a point in life, something the speaker is not trying to
reach. Robert Frost writes the poem using iambic tetrameter. which follows the beat of a horse. The rhythm of the poem further alludes that the
horse is a part of the speaker. Death is further mentioned in the poem when the speaker says. "In between the woods and frozen lake"(7) . In Norse
Mythology. the underworld is called Hel. and is located in the frozen region of Niflheim. Robert Frost puts Hel and Heaven near each other to
show how close the boundaries between the two are. The "darkest evening of the year" (8) shows how deep the speaker's depression is. This
depression bolsters the speaker's suicidal thoughts. These thoughts connect to the thin line between Heaven and Hel. In the third stanza of the poem,
the horse, the speaker's conscience, realizes the speaker's intention, and interrupts the the tranquil surroundings. When the horse gives it's harness
bells a shake (9), it is trying to gain the speaker's attention. The speaker believes that the horse is trying to make the man realize how bad an idea
suicide would be, as that would cause him to go to Hel (10). The speaker acknowledges the horses intent, and realizes the foolishness of suicide.
Sensory imagery is used to show how easy suicide would be.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening Analysis
In the modern day world there is an ongoing argument whether love is good or bad in nature. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is a simple
poem that was not originally written to create an underlying message of love, but due to the popularity of Robert Frost's work it has and still is being
critiqued comprehensively. This paper will prove thatRobert Frost is not referring to loving another person in particular but the narrator's peaceful
surroundings in the woods. Although, the literary techniques used in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" create a peaceful environment for the
reader, the stop in the wilderness creates a dilemma with the narrator's state of mind.
Having considered the case of love the narrator is feeling, it is evident of what is being adored in this poem. The title alone alerts the reader of the
place, setting and the basic theme of the story. The woods seem to exhibit a calmness and tranquility that encourages the protagonist to stop his journey
and rest and in reality, the wilderness represents madness and darkness in the world. Frost opens the first stanza with the self conscious narrator thinking
to himself, "Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though"(1–2). The man's insecurity naturally causes him to be uneasy but
the solitude in the woods creates the affection that awes him. Since this story is told from the narrator's point of view, the reader can now infer that the
protagonist is not thinking clearly due to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Career and Influences of Robert Frost
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 was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. Frost was born to his father, William Prescott Frost, a professional
journalist and his mother, Isabelle Moodie. As Frost grows older, he starts to attend his first days at school. After not liking the first day of
kindergarten in 1879 he drops out for the year. The next year, he drops out of school again. In 1881, he tries again for a third time to go to school
as a second grader, but then he also drops out. From then on, he was homeschooled. On May 5, 1885, Frost's father dies of tuberculosis. After this
tragedy, Frost and his family move to Lawrence, Massachusetts to live with his grandparents. He is forced to attend third grade and go to school. In
1886, his family moves to Salem Depot, New Hampshire. His mother begins teaching there and again he is forced to attend school but this time as a
fifth grader. Frost completes middle school in 1889 at the top
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Aleryani. Coach Will Rikard. British Literature. 25 January

  • 1. Aleryani. Coach Will Rikard. British Literature. 25 January Aleryani Coach Will Rikard British Literature 25 January 2017 Robert Frost Inspired by many great ones before him, Robert Lee Frost reached the pinnacle of literary and poetic greatness. He lived a life full of suffering, lost most of his loved ones, and even thought of suicide at one point. He loved one woman for forty years. He suffered from depression when he recited "Twilight" to her and she demurred him. Robert Frost 's aesthetic view on the world in his poem "stopping by woods on a snowy evening" is linked to his modernism projected in "The Road Not Taken" (Robert Frost 's concept of choice and modernism can be seen in his poems "Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods On A Snowy Evening.") William Prescott, Frost 's father, was a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He received more than forty honorary degrees, and was even invited the inauguration of John F. Kennedy where he wrote "The Gift Outright." Gerber Philip said this in his biography: As Frost ponders the lot of individual man, he stresses the human being as an entity. One among many, man yet remains single and alone with his fate. Life holds the possibility of terror and the potential of beauty. To know which it is to be, man first must educate himself. He must learn his place among the final truths of existence. Only by knowing these varieties for what they are can he work toward acceptance of them and his own lot (Gerber). Frost 's poems seemed like dark meditations on common unsaid thoughts; he is a modern poet that seemed ahead of his time in the standard to which his work is inscribed with ambiguity and how abstract it was. Frost 's poetry uniqueness is what makes it adored by most literary scholars. His poetry 's simplicity along with its ambiguity makes it so unique that his poetry was thought to be transcendental at one point in history. He was said to have enriched his style by setting natural meters against of speech against traditional meters. Religion to Frost was not an important factor in writing or living, in fact, he was an atheist for the longest time. He always said that real meaning was the most obvious. Modernism is an English genre of fiction, which
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  • 3. Analysis of Acquainted with the Night and Stopping by the... Research Paper first draft 16th Nov 2011 In a Dark Night, I Find My Answers. The two poems "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Acquainted with the Night" written by Robert Frost are very similar to each other because of the simplistic form of language used and the uses of metaphors. When we first read the poem, it looks like an ordinary poem but once we go in depth and understand the meaning, it becomes so much more. Both of the poem has a very dark, gloomy and lonely setting with a really mysterious tone. There are different metaphors used in each poem to symbolize death; "Sleep" in "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Night" in "Acquainted with the Night." The characters in the two poem are both in a journey and has come... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "I have walked out in rain –– and back in rain." from "Acquainted with the Night" shows the depression of the character because most of us relate to rain as an emotional moment and makes us feel vulnerable. When it rains, the whole atmosphere becomes very gloomy and sad, and the author is trying to express the characters sadness. The character in "Stopping by Woods in a Snowy Evening" is a very old fashioned person because he is with a horse and rides his horse through the woods. "My little horse must think it queer. To stop without a farmhouse near– Between the woods and frozen lake" shows how even his horse is surprised to be stopping in the middle of the woods where there is no livelihood. It is very unusual even for the horse to stop at this hour of the night because they should be trying to get home as soon as possible since it is already dark. "He gives his harness bells a shake. To ask if there is some mistake." express how the horse is also very attentive about what is going on around him and his master's unusual behavior. The horse tries to confirm with the character whether or not they have stopped in the right place. "I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet.When far away an interrupted cry. Came over houses from another street. But not to call me back or say good–bye," from "Acquainted With the Night" shows that the character is looking for a sign for him to look back but it was not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The Road Not Taken And Stopping By Woods On A Snowy... "A poem is best read in the light of all the other poems ever written... Progress is not the aim, but circulation." "Enthusiasm must be forced through the prism of metaphor." "Griefs are not the same as grievances." "There are no two things as important to us in life and art as being threatened and being saved... All our ingenuity is lavished on getting into danger legitimately so that we may be genuinely rescued." These prodigious quotes are all from the aspiring poet, Robert Frost. During Frost's lifetime he was challenged with a multitude of devastating experiences. The events that he had been challenged with contributed to the acclaimed writer he is today. This presentation will explain the difficult path Frost had to face in order to get where... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When he states, "To stop without a farmhouse near, Between the woods and frozen lake, The darkest evening of the year," he creates a cold atmosphere to represent death. He continues to state, "The woods are lovely, dark and deep." The dark but peaceful setting lures Frost in wanting to stay. Even though he wants to stay, he ends up going on with his journey because he has promises to keep. This poem also represents how Frost expresses his voice. He released all of his negative thoughts into a creative outlet, which has made him the famous writer he is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, by Robert Frost Essay Robert Frost uses metaphor and symbolism extensively in 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening', developing deeper and more complex meanings from a superficially simple poem. Frost's own analysis contributes greatly to our appreciation of the importance of metaphor, claiming that "metaphor [is] the whole of thinking," inviting the reader to interpret the beautiful scene in a more profound way. However, the multitude of possible interpretations sees it being read as either carefully crafted lyric, a "suicide poem, [or] as recording a single autobiographical incident" . Judith Oster argues, therefore, that the social conditions individual to each reader tangibly alter our understanding of metaphor. Despite the simplicity of language,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The issues that Frost explores are universalised by metaphor, with allusions to literary traditions such as in Hamlet's soliloquy, where the nature of life is explored. These conflicts between our duties and the promise of "sleep" are pre–eminently relevant to both the personal dilemma faced by the traveller but also to the reader, who is no closer to determining whether the final conclusion made is one of suicide and 'rest' or whether the "promises" outweigh the traveller's 'intemperance' with the woods. As the poem becomes increasingly complex, the conventional metaphor of falling "snow" contributes layer upon layer of meaning. The "downy flake" transcends its literal sense, becoming a 'blanket' that both obscures and numbs the senses, hiding the dangers whilst tempting the traveller to stop. The coldness and darkness of the setting contrasts the purity of snow with the shadowy, even sinister idea that nature is enticing us with eternal rest. Frost's allusions to the poem, 'Keen fitful gusts' with the line "and miles to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Summary Of Robert Lee Frost Name Professor Course Date Poetry Analysis Essay Robert Lee Frost was an American, highly regarded for his realistic depictions of rural life and his command of American colloquial speech (Bloom 10). In his poems, he employs several stylistic devices that give the poem a good flow. Frost's poems, Birches and Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening, share certain stylistic elements such as he uses rhetoric questions, repetition, alliteration, symbolism, and imagery. In Birches, a rhetoric question is apparent where he asks, "whose words these are I think now?" Also, in Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening, he asks, "now am I free to be poetical?" (Frost) In essence, the use of particular stylistic devices and themes set the pace, and the mood of the poems and they communicate Frost's message in an appealingly and comprehensively to the reader. In poem Birches, there is the use of alliteration in the last words of the fifth and sixth stanza where he states, "he gives his harness bells a shake" (Frost). Alliteration refers to the repetition of the first letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words (Bloom 37). As seen above, there is a repetition of the consonant 'h.' The repetition of the same sounds at the beginning of a series of words creates an interesting rhythm that sets the pace of the poem. Frost also uses alliteration Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening to set the pace and create the mood of the poem. The consonant "h" creates ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening This essay is included my own understanding, plus some information that I gathered from a lot of researches and critics' comments on this poem. I, myself interpret this poem through the first perspective I would explain about, and in two other perspectives my ideas hardly is included. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" Complete Text Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village, though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. My little horse must think it queer To stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Let's analyze the poem: Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village, though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. First stanza gives us an imagery in which the speaker/Frost is far from his house to watch the beautiful falling snow. He comes with his horse to the woods covered with snow, and is attracted by it's beauty. He is losing himself, his previous life, his previous character, as he says "I think I know". He cannot strongly say that there are his woods and the house is his. The line "his house is in the village, though;" is where the division lies, between village which would be "society", "civilization", "duty", "responsibility", "sensibility"; and the woods which is beyond the borders of village and all the things it represents.
  • 8. And the next line emphasize that he forgets his previous character which he had in village. The more important point that this line represents is that he doesn't like to be seen by others; sensible people who live in the village or society, because they would disapprove and criticize his action; stopping alone there, in the dark, in the snow. My little horse must think it queer To stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen lake The darkest evening of the year. In the first two line ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Robert Frost: A Poet To Remember Essay Robert Frost was one of America's leading 20th–century poets and a four–time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. He has been an inspiration to many young writers and aspiring poets. Although he lived through a troubled and tragic life, Frost was able to express his unique view of nature and the world around him in the delicate art of poetry. His direct and easy–to–read poems made him one of the most recognized poets in the country. Robert Frost had the ability to make his poems accessible to anyone reading them. His use of everyday vocabulary and traditional form of poetry made it easy for readers, although translating them is not as easy. Robert Frost's poems are very connotative in nature, making them very profound to read. Frost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A person who thinks more metaphorically might think, perhaps he is speaking of death. How he would love to stop and just wait it out, but he has promises, and things he must fulfill before he can let go. Frost used metaphors constantly, in most of his poetry. The above is only one example, there are many in just the one poem, В‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening'. His later poems were simpler, but still held to their metaphoric brothers. 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 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Life and Death in Thomas' Do Not Go Gentle and Frost's... Life and Death in Thomas' Do Not Go Gentle and Frost's Stopping by Woods "'Carpe Diem'('seize the day') is a Latin phrase which has come to denote an important literary motif especially common in lyric poetry: the encouragement to make the most of present life while it lasts, or to 'live for the moment," (The UVic Writer's Guide). Both Robert Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and Dylan Thomas's "Do Not Go Gentle" explore the idea that people should attempt to live life to its fullest. Thomas's poem, written to his father, employs a very emotional, pleading style that deeply appeals to the audience, while Frost's poem, a series of thoughts about his own eventual death, exhibits a more pensive, practical, subtle ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is an exhortation to end with a bang instead of a whimper" (Stanford 117). The theme of "Do Not Go Gentle" appears throughout every line of the poem. For example, in the line "Old age should burn and rave at close of day," (Thomas 2570) Thomas insists that his father not give up or "lose heart" (Stanford 117) simply because death is approaching. "Curse, bless, me now, with your fierce tears I pray" (Thomas 2570) is "a plea for the persistence of individuality to the end, without remission," (Stanford 117). Thomas desperately wants his father to fight his impending death, instead of simply accepting it. Thomas attempts to raise the father?s spirits and hopes with optimistic examples of those who do not simply acquiesce to death. Some of these examples are "wise men", "good men", "wild men", and "grave men" (Thomas 2570). Thomas wants to impress upon his father that he has a choice to make; he can either choose to comply to death or he can fight it with all of his remaining energy. Thomas engages an imperative, urgent tone to enthuse his father and to point out how little time the old man has left. This tone is evident throughout the poem, but especially in the last stanza. As the poem progresses, Thomas? insistence increases; he becomes more and more frantic and determined to convince his father to stay alive as time is running out. Using metaphors comparing death to other objects and events, Thomas tries to make death seem less ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Robert Frost Research Paper Robert Frost is a pastoral poet. His love for rural life revealed in his work. He incorporates major themes: one's life choices, isolation, and nature in his works. Robert Frost major theme incorporated in his work making life choices. For example, Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken" the persona walking along and coming to a point where he must decide on which two paths to take: "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood/ And sorry I could not travel both/ And be one traveler, long I stood" (Frost 1–3). This evidence proves the persona is not sure which path to take, but he knows he will soon have to make a decision. Also, which path he take may determine ways that will change his life forever: "Two roads diverged in a wood, and I––/ I took the one less travelled by,/ And that has made all the difference. (Frost 18–20). The persona has chosen the one path to travel, he knows years from now his one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For instance, Robert Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" one major concern is the persona is alone: "Whose woods these are I think I know./ His house is in the village, though;/ He will not see me stopping here" (Frost 1–3). The persona is implying that the owner of the house lives away from the town. Also, he says "He will not see me stopping here" the persona is probably hoping the owner does not see him in his woods. However, he rather be alone with his horse and relax in the woods: "The only other sound's the sweep/ Of easy wind and downy flake." (Frost 1–2). Therefore, he does not want to leave the woods because it is peaceful. He enjoys the quiet woods alone. Additionally, the persona would rather be lonesome in the freezing cold than back in the village: "The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,/ But I have promises to keep,/ And miles to go before I sleep,/ (Frost 13–15). The persona must rest because got people and places to visit. Therefore, the persona ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Perseverance in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a... Perseverance in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening Epictetus once wrote, "First say what you would be; and then do what you have to do." This aphorism of self–discovery and obligation clearly describes Robert Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." In the course of the poem, Frost's speaker is confronted with two choices: he can either forget his problems or he can follow through with his responsibilities and make the most of life. It is through Frost's remarkable presentation of the speaker's thoughts that the reader may see how difficult this decision can be. Through powerful elements, such as alliteration, rhythm, and imagery, Frost stresses the importance of perseverence and facing one's fears and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through clever and distant alliteration, Frost displays the importance of deciding whether to remain strong and press forward or to cowardly give up. Despite its possibly being the more difficult path, Frost signifies the essence of perseverence through rhythm. Throughout the poem, Frost employs a repetitive, trance–like rhythm to compliment the speaker's struggle to fight off reality and remain in his carefree world. Furthermore, Jhan Hochman explains it as "an ingenious form of interlocking rhyme: the third unrhymed line of the first three stanzas provokes the subsequent stanza's rhymed sound" (Hochman 4). Frost's use of rhythm is an eloquent and clever element that expresses the weak and weary state of the speaker in his moment of a life–changing decision. Yet, in the last stanza frost brings his flowing lines to an abrupt halt with "But I have promises to keep" (Frost 13). With this line, Frost not only shifts the meter of the poem, but also signifies the speaker's realization that he cannot give up or quit because of the life commitments he has made. Frost powerfully uses the rhythm in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" to emphasize the importance of choosing the path of life and all of its responsibilities instead of the easy way out. With imagery, Frost again stresses the significance of persevering over one's fears. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Summary Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening By Robert... The most publicly celebrated poet in America, did not publish his first poem until he was thirty–nine years old. Robert Frost poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" includes vivid imagery of nature. Robert Frost had a traumatic, yet interesting childhood growing up. Frost also had a unique stylistic interpretation in his poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".Robert Frost was the first born son of the newly–wed parents Belle and Will Frost. He was named after the legendary Confederate General, Robert E. Lee. Robert Frost was born in the year of 1874 and lived an interesting life of 88 years until his death in 1963. During Frost's early childhood, it was very confusing like all of the instability between his parents. Frost grew up in a very unstable environment, when he reached adulthood, he searched for stability in a relationship, which he found with who would be his future wife, Elinor. Growing up, Frost spent summers working odd jobs in California, such as helping load wagons full of wood, raking and hoeing landscape on individual's property, and load piles of firewood. During this time Frost's mother, Belle, accepted a teaching position in New Hampshire. Frost loved going to school up in Salem, New Hampshire. Here, he discovered a newfound love for basketball. But, unfortunately Frost could never attend a public school for too long because of his very reactive and sensitive stomach. His stomach would cramp up at any time he would become nervous, causing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Robert Frost Transcendental Influences A man so widely known that he was chosen to speak at President Kennedy's inauguration, Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874, shortly after the Transcendental movement in America (Robert Frost). Frost is considered as one of the best known poets in American history, having won many awards such as the Pulitzer Prize for his amazing works of poetry. Frost's works formed as a bridge between 19th and 20th century poetry (Robert Frost ). He is well known for using a distinct form of rhythm and using a New England dialect in his poems. The career for one of the most famous poet almost did not start at all, Frost's writings were at first shot down, as a result of this, he traveled to England and became a huge success. After his success in England he returned to the United States and became a huge success in America as well. (Robert Frost) Frost was known as a poet who had many different influences in his work. One of these influences was Transcendentalism. Transcendentalism was a movement in the 1830's that have strong beliefs in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The transcendental influence can best be seen in the lines "Two roads diverged in a wood, and I – I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference." Transcendentalism has an emphasis on nonconformity, and the man walking the road, took the one less traveled. By taking the road less traveled the man is not following the path that normal society would take. The man is using his own reasoning and thought, and has chosen to take a different path than the others. Frost has said that this poem can have many interpretations and meanings, and that it is a very tricky poem. Some believe that the sign is a sigh of satisfaction, while others do believe it is a sigh of regret, not knowing what he has missed from the other path. There are also other examples of Frost using transcendentalism in his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Mending Wall Analysis Both "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" share a common theme of man in nature. This theme is illustrated by setting of both poems. The setting of "Mending Wall" takes place in between two orchards divided by a wall, which leads to the main conflict of the poem. The setting of "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" sets up the poem on the edge of the woods on the side of the road while the speaker is on their way to a farmhouse. The nature is shown by the use of imagery when Frost writes in "Mending Wall" that "He is all pine and I am apple orchard" (24). This remains constant throughout the poem like in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" where the speaker says, "He will not see me stopping here / To watch his woods fill up with snow" (3–4). This illustrates how nature can be eye–catching and admirable since the speaker stops what he is doing just to look into the woods, he had to have seen something that caught his eye and made the stop one worth making. The theme of mystery is also present in both poems and is present in "Mending Wall" through the role of the neighbor and the wall itself, and in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" through the role of the woods. In "Mending Wall" the speaker does not see the need in for a wall while the neighbor does. The speaker would question the neighbor but they would never get a concrete answer the speaker claims "I could say 'Elves' to him, / but it's not elves exactly, and I'd rather / He said it for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, By... Robert Frost is a great American poet that mastered the art of eloquently imprinting his readers with an overarching idea, or theme, through his use of symbolic language, precise picture painting, and metronome rhyme and meter. Frost addresses many different themes across his poems, but sometimes has similar methods of displaying his themes; three of the most prominent are the crossroads of a decision in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," the battle between desire and hate in "Fire and Ice," and the loss of innocence in "Nothing Gold Can Stay." "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" is all about the internal debates that occur when making a decision. The poem is designed to "unsettle certitude" as Guy Rotella, a literary critic, put ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The connection between Earth and a relationship is a little more subtle since he does not outright say it, but due to fire and ice being connected to emotions that come from the "world" of a relationship the reader can assume their connection to the "world" in the poem. "Fire and Ice" also draws on Frost's tendency to "unsettle certitude" since, as Guy Rotella put it, he concludes with a point that ends up reopening what he had already closed earlier in the poem (253). Frost once again never makes a decision in this poem, he just uses the metaphor to debate with himself on why either desire or hate could be the one to destroy a relationship. Similarly to "Fire and Ice," Robert Frost also uses an extended metaphor to show the theme in "Nothing Gold Can Stay." Frost tells the story of how the most beautiful part of Spring only lasts a short time in couplets of iambic trimeter, and it is not until line six until the true meaning of this poem is exposed, "So Eden sank to grief" (Frost). This is alluding to the "Garden of Eden" story from the Bible when mankind was banished from the garden; which also reveals the reasoning for personifying Spring earlier in the poem by saying gold was "Her Hardest hue to hold" (Frost, 2). Frost wants the reader to connect mankind's falling from the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Robert Frost Contributions Robert Frost is a rare twentieth century poet, that may be the most recognized name in poetry. He won the Pulitzer Prize a total of four times, which is more than any other poet. Some of his best work includes: "The Road Not Taken", "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Robert Frost was a literary legacy. When he was 87 years old, he was asked to write and recite a poem for President John F. Kennedys inauguration. During Robert Frosts lifetime, he received over 40 honorary degrees and of course his four Pulitzer Prizes. Robert Frosts life was reflected in his poetry in a variety of ways. Robert Frost was raised in New England, and many of his poems characters and settings are based in New England. Robert Frost was also greatly influenced by emotions and events in everyday life. He could take every day events such as: watching ice weigh down birch tree branches, the mowing of fields of hay or even the mending of stories on a wall and perceives a deeper meaning to love, hate, or conflict. These writing techniques lead to another reason as to why Robert Frost is so successful. Many of his poems, such as, "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are inspired by the natural world. In 1897, Frost began studying at Harvard. This really helped Robert Frost become an intellectual and more of a serious poet. Unfortunately, after two years he had drop out of school. He then became a chicken farmer, which helped familiarize him with farming and rural life. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Robert Frost Wrote The Revered Poem, “Stopping By Woods Robert Frost wrote the revered poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" at his home in Shaftsbury, Vermont in 1922. It appeared in his fifth collection of poems entitled, "New Hampshire," published in 1923, which won his first Pulitzer Prize. In this poem, the reader is privy to a few moments of the thoughts of a man who pauses in the silence and solitude of the winter woods. It's a poem with such simplicity that a child can commit it to memory and such complexity that scholars repeatedly explicate it. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is a closed form, lyric poem that's written in iambic tetrameter, containing a total of eight syllables in each line. It has four quatrains that follow the rhyme scheme aaba, bbcb, ccdc, dddd. The... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Having experienced his first success in London, he returned to New Hampshire where his work continued to reflect the scenes and values of nature he experienced there. In 1947, Frost spoke of the poem to a student at a reading he was giving at Bowdoin College. When asked which of his poems his favorite was, Frost replied, "I'd have to say 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' is that poem" (Bleau 175). Continuing, he revealed the inspiration for the verse was a personal experience he had just before Christmas in 1905. Frost failed to sell his produce at the local market and had no money for gifts for his children. As he neared his home on that snowy evening, he stopped his wagon. Overwhelmed, he cried in frustration. Beginning with the title, Robert Frost sets the scene and topic for the poem: an informal, spontaneous "stopping by" a private wooded spot during a snowfall at the end of a day. The narrator's progression of thought during his contemplation is seen in each stanza. In the first stanza, the speaker thinks about the owner of the woods. He considers he might know who the woods belong to, but he is not certain. Even though, he knows the owner lives in town and is not nearby. So, he won't see the traveler, or trespasser. The narrator is safe and alone in his brief ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. How Did Robert Frost's Influence His Work? "In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: It goes on." (Google Images). This quote has touched many as have numerous of the literary masterpieces by the man who said it. Robert Frost is one of the best known poets of the 19th Century having created numerous works of art throughout his lifetime. His poems are often quoted in shows and movies and always thought of when trying to describe something naturally beautiful. Frost's life had a huge impact on his writing as did the period in which he wrote his poems. One of his most famous pieces "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is the perfect example of how easily one could be swayed with his in depth descriptions of natural scenery with a dark twist. Robert Frost's work was inspired by his adulthood spent on a farm ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California. He lived there for 12 years with his mother, Isabelle Moodie, and his father William Prescott Frost Jr., who died of tuberculosis when Robert was only 12. His mother then moved him and his sister, Jeanie, to Lawrence, Massachusetts. Frost met his wife, Elinor White, at Lawrence High School when they were the co– Valedictorian's of their class. After they married they moved to a farm in New Hampshire which was the setting of many of his poems.They then had 6 children, two of which died shortly after birth and two had mental illnesses. Having had so many traumatizing events within his family life, his writing was greatly influenced. After the death of two of his children his poems started getting a much deeper meaning. A good example of this would be "Home Burial" which is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. We Grow Accustomed To The Walk People have different types of lifestyle, personality, thoughts, careers, and choices, but in the world, there are only a few people who have similar thoughts, ideas, and a passion for writing such as Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost. These poets express their emotions and feelings, in their poems. In this paper I will compare two poems by Dickinson "We Grow Accustomed to the Dark" and "A Bird came down the Walk," and two poems by Frost, "Acquainted with the Night" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," the history of the authors, and their similarities and differences. Dickinson was born 1830, in Amherst, MA, in USA ("Dickinson"). Frost was born in San Francisco, California, in 1874 (Hard). Both authors lived in the same time periods,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost wrote many poems about their emotions and the darkness that they faced or in their childhood or adult life. Dickinson writes about darkness because she always stayed in her house; she did not leave her house and she did not see the light of the sky in her life (Tredell). "We Grow Accustomed to the Dark," by Emily Dickinson, is about the darkness and hopelessness. This poem has a deeper meaning about people who have to face all kinds of struggle or problems in their life. The poet writes, "When light is put away– As when the Neighbor holds the Lamp" (Dickinson "We Grow," 2–3). This means that sometimes it's tough to solve a problem, but there is always hope to solve any kind of problem. All kinds of struggle can help one to learn about the struggle and also to get experiences to solve these problems or struggles again in the future. "Acquainted with the Night," by Robert Frost, is about a person who is walking alone in the rain. He is approached by a cop (watchman) and the speaker looks down and walks away from a cop. The author mentions, "And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain" (Frost "Acquainted," 6). This quote means that speaker does not make eye contact with the cop because he does not want to explain to the cop what he is doing outside at the night time. "I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet. When far away an interrupted cry" (Frost "Acquainted," 7–8) this quote explains while the speaker is walking, he hears, someone crying in one of the houses on the street. "But not to call me back or say good–bye" (Frost "Acquainted," 10) this explains that the speaker does not want to see who is crying; however; he ignores that crying sound and walks away from it. "I have looked down the saddest city lane" (Frost "Acquainted," 4) this proves that the speaker in the poem is very depressed. The speaker is lonely or maybe the speaker is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Robert Frost Poetry Analysis The works of poet Robert Frost are in fact famous for his time, because they impacted the world of poetry. Though his poems bring the theme of nature, there is more to his rich poetry. His poems shape an image of life and how life interacts with the surrounding environment. Robert Frost's two poems "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "After Apple Picking," talk about the reality of life by telling the story of a person in their early life compared to a person at the end of life. Some believe that Frost uses nature in his poems to construct an image of the surroundings. Nitika Grover mentions, "...Ecocriticism shows the linkage between nature and life." (Grover 1). Grover explains that there is a factor of nature to Frost's work, but his poems go much deeper than the essence of nature. Nature plays a role in the poems, but it can't explain the concept of time throughout. The concept of nature is the main overall theme, but Carol Frost puts it, "Frost poems work to an absolute truth that becomes an involved process of thought, feeling, ideas, will, and judgement." (Frost 2). Frost here mentions that the poems are seen with characteristics such as judgment. Frost's poems show an overall topic of nature and he presents these as thoughts. The ideas of characteristics veers from the idea of time shown in Frost's poems. The perspective Frost is coming at is that nature creates a presentation of ideas instead of a representation of time. Frost uses passing time between ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Examples Of Human Tension By Robert Frost Inner Human Tension Robert Frost accurately captures the conflicted nature of human beings using nature imagery with underlying meanings. In "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," Frost depicts a peaceful landscape in order to explain the pull humans experience to both fulfill worldly responsibilities and also follow their own wishes, while in "Neither Out Far nor In Deep" Frost describes human fascination with the the sea, but also notes that humans belong on land, and are unable to truly understand the aspects they admire in the water. In these poems, aspects of the natural world represent human desires that are inherent, while influences due to society symbolize the limitations of humans. In this way, Frost also compares the tension humans feel when caught between civilization and wilderness to the strain caused by the mix of hopelessness and yearning. Frost emphasizes aspects of the winter imagery of "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" as symbols for the conflict between duty and desire in the speaker's mind. Initially, the thought of the owner of the woods reminds the speaker of society, and provides a temporary motivation for him to fulfill his obligations; then he again becomes lost in the description of his setting. The speaker continues elaborating on the woods he must leave until the sound of his horse's bells remind him of his responsibility. He then yields once more to his longing to stay in the woods, conveyed in his interpretation of winter weather as comforting. The image of "downy" snow (Frost 12) is reminiscent of pillows, and the phrase "easy wind" (Frost 12) reveals the speaker's belief that the woods are a simpler environment than the one he is obligated to return to. The final stanza reveals the speaker's inner tension most evidently, with his clearest statement of admiration for nature, "The woods are lovely" (Frost 13), followed by his firmest rebuff; "But I have promises to keep" (Frost 14). The dichotomy Frost accentuates by detailing nature so reverently, then interjecting reminders of duty and society serves to underline the tension felt by humans, whose nature is caught between duty and desire. Frost captures a similarly contradictory aspect of human nature in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Summary Of Stopping By The Woods On A Snowy Evening By... Robert Frost has written many poems. In this specific poem ВЁStopping By The Woods On A Snowy EveningВЁ Frost develops an ideal theme through the usage of symbolism, imagery, and different types of figurative language. In this poem Frost uses symbolism to convey a central idea or theme. Through the use of symbolism he opens up the readers minds to focus on the message of the poem, Frost uses these symbols to get the readers thinking about the presented idea of life's journey. Frost uses words as a symbol of life. Frost this is the Webster my present life because what are full of things that are undiscovered new teachings and they will eventually end, but you have to get through them first. This relates back to life because there is an end and beginning. We also have to get through part of our lives before it comes to an end. Also as we live we explore new things and we learn new things another symbol frost uses is snow. In this poem the snow symbolizes death snow is used in the way that the words are filling up and coming to an end. Since the word represents life the snow is feeling of the words meaning it's comic life is coming closer to death. Just like as we journey through life will become older learn more we also become closer and closer to death each day. Frost uses the snow in this way to show that the words are filling up with more snow as the journey continues and that this so–called journey well at some point come to an end. Frost uses the symbols to develop a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Snow Bound By John Greenleaf Whittier Snow Bound" by John Greenleaf Whittier and "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost, both have several representations of imagery and imagination. Throughout both poems, the authors use imagery to connect to the reading senses and imagination to allow the reader to appeal to their own senses. "Snow Bound", a poem describing the joyous day for a boy who experienced snow for the first time. Author, John Greenleaf Whittier uses imagery perfectly. "The blue walls of the firmament, no cloud about, no earth below–a universe of sky and snow." The author describes the setting of the poem by his use of rich and creative imagery. Robert Frost also shows his touch of imagery in the poem, "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening". ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Similarities Between Birches And Birches During his life, Robert Frost, the icon of American literature, wrote many poems that limned the picturesque American landscape. His mostly explicated poems "Birches" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" reflect his young manhood in the rural New England. Both of these poems are seemingly straightforward but in reality, they deal with a higher level of complexity and philosophy. Despite the difference in style and message, "Birches" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are loaded with vivid imagery and symbolism that metaphorically depict the return to nature and childhood, the struggle between reality and imagination and also life and death. Frost wrote "Birches" in a blank verse structure, but "Stopping by Woods" is basically ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The playful boy in "Birches" is imaginary, he clearly represents a younger version of Frost himself. The boy enjoyed swinging the birch trees by "riding them over and over again / until he took the stiffness out of them"(30–31). This visual image illustrates the victory of the poet in moving to his own imaginary world; an ambiguous catastrophic world that he allows himself to attain without any boundaries. Consequently, Frost draws an extremely strong image of ice "shattering and avalanching" on the snowy ground till a point "you'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen"(13). The pliable quality of the birch authorized the poet to become released. In "The Study Guide on Robert Frost's Birches", it is claimed that "this line (13) signals the beginning of a retreat from reality" (Poetry for Students, Vol. 13). In addition, comparing the birches in the ice storm to "girls on hands and knees that throw their hair" (19) symbolizes the captive position of the speaker who is getting older as the birches, year after year. Even though the poet feels free when he is a swinger of birches, he reached a statement that "Earth is the right place for love" (53); climbing the trees and knowing about coming back again is an example of escape and transcendence towards ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Robert Frost Robert Frost has been described as an ordinary man with a deep respect for nature, talking to ordinary people. To what extent do you agree with this view? Poetry is a literary medium which often resonates with the responder on a personal level, through the subject matter of the poem, and the techniques used to portray this. Robert Frost utilises many techniques to convey his respect for nature, which consequently makes much of his poetry relevant to the everyday person. The poems "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' and "The mending wall" strongly illuminate Frost's reverence to nature and deal with such matter that allows Frost to speak to ordinary people. On the surface, "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" deals with a seemingly ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, when the responders' delves deeper into the poem, it is clear that at a allegorical level the wall is a metaphor representing the barrier that exists in the neighbours' friendship. The first eleven lines of the poem if rife with imagery that describes the dilapidation of the wall. The first line of the poem emphasises that "something" exists that "doesn't love a wall". This personification makes the "something" seem human–like. The use of words such as "spills" and "makes gaps" convey an image of animate actions and create a vivid impression of the degradation of the wall. Nature, presented in the form of cold weather, frost and the activities of creatures, also seeks to destroy the wall. The idea that walls are unnatural and therefore nature abhors walls is portrayed in the phrase "makes gaps even two can pass abreast", which metaphorically indicates that nature desires for man to walk side by side with no barrier between them. When the two meet to fix the wall, it is a metaphor that could be interpreted as the two repairing their friendship as "To each the boulders have fallen to each" which shows that faults in their relationship lie on behalf of them both. While they are mending the wall, a light–hearted tone is established. This is shown through the inclusion of the metaphor "spring is mischief in me" which shows the neighbours having fun together in repairing the wall, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Analysis Of Harlem By Langston Hughes "Harlem" by Langston Hughes explains the importance of following your dreams. In the poem, Hughes explains that if you ignore a dream it will slowly get less and less appealing to you until it goes away completely. Hughes writes, "What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?" (Lines 1–3). Langston Hughes uses this simile to explain to the reader that your ambitions can't be forgotten about because they will deteriorate and turn into nothing. Hughes also says, "Or fester like a sore and then run? Does it stink like rotten meat?" (Lines 4–6). In this comparison, Hughes uses a sore and rotten meat to show the reader that a dream that is neglected can fill you with regret until you cannot take it anymore. If you ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Harlem" can change the way the reader thinks about their future and even change the way they live their life. Millions of people struggle with trying to find a reason to follow one of their dreams, but Hughes explains several in "Harlem". "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost is about the loneliness and darkness in his own life. Frost uses the woods in the story as a way to portray his current situation in life. In the poem Frost writes, "The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but I have promises to keep, and miles to go before I sleep..." (Lines 13–15). Frost describes the woods as dark and desolate which is a metaphor for how he feels in life. He explains how they are far from town and there isn't anyone near him. This could mean he keeps himself guarded from others to avoid getting hurt or hurting others. In "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" Frost writes, "Between the woods and frozen lake the darkest evening of the year" ( Lines 7–8). Frost compares a dark evening with the darkness and sadness in his life, saying that right now he is as depressed as he has every been. "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" is similar to "Harlem" by Langston Hughes because both poems stress the point that everyone will enjoy life more if they do the things that make them happy. Hughes and Frost use metaphors and similes to show the outcome of an unaccomplished life. "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening" is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Analysis Of Stopping By Woods On A Snow Evening By Robert... As time goes on, society becomes more and more disconnected from nature. With each year that passes new gadgets are put onto the market. Technology has recently released a device known as a virtual reality headset. This is for those who want to see the world without actually taking a step outside. Technology has become the forefront of people's lives. In his eye opening poem, "Stopping By Woods on a Snowing Evening",Robert Frost addresses the idea that nature is a blessing that should be appreciated, not ignored, and seen for its true beauty. In order to convey the meaning of his poem, Frost includes elements such as relaxing language, vivid imagery, and an appreciative tone. If one looks close enough, they are sure to find serenity in nature. One element the speaker presents to showcase the beauty of nature is relaxing language.The words the poet incorporates create a calm and still feeling. The only sound in these vacant woods is the "sweep of easy wind and downy flake." The words "easy" (12), "sweep" (12), and "downy" (12) have a quiet sense to them. The speaker could have described the winds as howling or as something a little more harsh. Instead, he characterizes them as an easy breeze with a smooth whisper to them. He then describes the falling of the snow as a soft and slow descend. Words such as these are typically associated with situations that are calm and quiet. They are words that are simply spoken and easily recognized as soothing. By describing the scene before the speaker with words such as these, the persona shows readers the beauty and simplicity of nature. The speaker furthermore conveys the idea that nature is a grandeur that should be recognized by including the element of imagery. The poet utilizes imagery as a technique to appeal to reader's sense of sight . It is "the darkest evening of the year" (line 8) and a traveller and his horse stop "between the woods and frozen lake" (line 7). By writing with details such as these, readers are capable of effortlessly envisioning the peaceful scenery that lies before the speaker. The persona then draws on reader's sense of sound. "The only other sound's the sweep / Of easy wind and downy flake." The illustration allows readers to not only see, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Many Choices In The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost Bailey Bolling Instructor Cheryl Remmers English 1020 CRN 13913 6 December 2017 Life's Many Choices Robert Frost is a well–known poet; his writing is famous for its simplicity with a more in–depth meaning than what he has written down. In his poems, there is usually a choice someone must make, and these decisions represent real–life situations that most people are facing. The choices that are made could drastically change one's life. "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are two of Frost's poems that are about making choices. Frost makes it easy to relate to the poems because they apply to everyday life. "The Road Not Taken" talks about the significance of one's choices, and "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" talks about how a man is readying himself for the inevitable, he is reflecting on his past choices that he has made and how it has affected him. These two poems provide us with an outlook on decisions made in real life situations; "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" teach us to think before we make decisions because it could end up changing one's life. In "The Road Not Taken" and in "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" each speaker must make a choice, that could forever change their lives. Both speakers are alone and seem to be feeling indecisive. They both seem intrigued by nature's beauty, in "The Road Not Taken" it is the "yellow wood" and in "Stopping by Woods on Snowy Evening" it is "the woods fill up with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening By Robert Frost Poetry in All Its Forms Poetry's stellar form allows people to creatively observe the boundaries of depth. Forms of poetry are equal in difficulty; a portion of humankind might consider a sonnet difficult, in contrast others find it to be elementary. A poem I admire is called "stopping by woods on a snowy evening" by Robert Frost (Frost, R. 1922). As I marvel at the simplicity of this poem, I find it no wonder that it's considered a masterpiece with the words so beautifully painted inside the text. I would consider this poem to be rhyming/free verse . Poetry conforms to its own set of rules; however, rules in free verse are exiguous. Free verse carries the weight of the writer's mind, while the writer creates their own rules. It allows one the freedom to conduct the poem however one wishes. Writing free verse challenges my brain to complete multiple forms, assimilating creative juices. Free verse allows oneself to express one's soul, but if you take, for example, a haiku or a senryu that restriction makes the poem difficult to write. A haiku is difficult to master perfectly, although it is my favorite form of poetry. In poetry, imagery is required to be painted with a pen; it is essential that the reader observe what the author's imagination is showing. In conducting an interview with Ben Pickard, on a poetry site I have frequented since I started writing poetry, he expresses that he enjoys writing new types of poetry and his favorite is the sonnet. When asked ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening Robert Frost is known for his layering poetry that includes unique characters for the audience to enjoy. He, "always wants to reach for a more complicated vision, one arrived at after much pain, much "sucking up" of passive, reflected beauty" (Panini 235). This quote about Frost suggests that his writing flourishes in the face of uncomfortable subject matter, a quality most ordinary people do possess. However, Frost is not trying to steer the audience toward his way of thinking, he is simply telling us that the characters we sense in the text will have bold personalities, also known as persona. An illustration of this writing strategy is present in Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," from the 1928 collection, West–Running Brook. Here, Frost creates a good example of a Rubaiyat stanza that is broken into four sections totaling sixteen lines. From the moment we meet the narrator, we are aware that his persona is suspicious, from his inspections of the winter surrounding, to the focus on his odd behavior and the final reminder of a plan. What "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" deeply concerns is found in the fresh behaviors and subtle hints that the narrator presents to the reader. Due to Frost's skillful delivery of narrator's persona in this poem, the topic of suicidal thoughts is presented to the audience in an attempt to create awareness about this life threatening condition. In a strategic move by Frost, he presents us with an unreliable ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Robert Frost Imagery Robert Frost is an English poet who wrote several poems during the 1900's. His poems include "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is literally about a person who stops in the woods on the night of December 21st or the winter solstice. The owner of the woods lives in the village so he will not see the speaker. When the speaker stops and looks into the woods, his horse shakes his bells. However, the speaker wants to stay in the woods, but he has miles to ride before he can go to sleep. Through his use of imagery, figure of speech, and sound effects, Frost illustrates the influences of life and death in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Frost uses several images to portray the ideas of life and death. For example, Frost writes "to watch his woods fill up with snow" (Frost l. 4). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In this poem, the rhyme scheme AABA remains constant for the first three stanzas. In the fourth stanza, the rhyme scheme changes from AABA to AABB. The last line is repeated. Frost, wants the reader to understand the importance of "miles to go before I sleep". Frost repeats this line of poetry because he wants the reader to see that people must fulfill their responsibilities before they die. In this line, miles mean years, and sleep means death. The speaker has more years to live before he dies. Another example of sound effects is Frost's use of alliteration in the form of "only other" and "sound's the sweep" (Frost l. 11) in the line "the only other sound's the sweep/ of easy wind and downy flake" (Frost ll. 11–12). This line is very soothing to the reader and implies that death is silent. Then Frost adds "of easy wind and downy flake" (Frist l.12). This sound effect is assonance, as one can hear the breeze of the wind and the snow falling to the ground. These two sounds represent the ideas of death slowly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Comparison of Toadstool Wood and Snowy Wood 'The toadstool wood' describes a woodland at twilight. Everything is quiet and dark. Reeves describes the woods as if it is hoary and inactive, I know this because in the poem he says 'mouldy'. He also says 'arching sprays of bramble' which means there would be alot of cultivation as well in the wood. On the other the poem, 'stopping by Woods on a snowy evening' has the setting of a man on horse back stopping by the woods for a rest when he is on a long journey. Frost describes these woods as if it is glacial and gloomy, I know this because in the poem he says 'The darkest evening of the year'. This would also means that it is frightening. There are many common things between these two poems. Firstly both poems scenes are set in the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The narrator knows the owner of the woods and knows where he lives but then he says, 'he will not see me stopping here'. Why will the owner of the woods not see the narrator stopping by? Then the narrator says 'my little horse must think it queer, to stop without a farmhouse near', so that means his horse thinks it is very odd, to stop when there is no farmhouse near. So why did the narrator stop then? This is another example of the mystery the poem evokes. The author describes the woods as if it is very scary. I know this because he says 'the woods are lovely, dark and deep'. I think he was being sarcastic when he said 'lovely'. 'Dark and deep' would mean that the woods had a lack of light and that it was very big and you could get lost in it. In this poem the narrator still has miles to travel in his journey because on the last two lines he says 'and miles to go before I sleep'. Where is the narrator's destination? This poem has an AABArhyme scheme. Frost has added alliteration 'dark and deep' and he uses onomatopoeia 'the only other sound's the sweep, of easy wind and downy flake.' Overall this poem created a more powerful sense of mystery than the toadstool wood, which means it has created more suspense. I can see more mystery in this poem other than toadstool wood. I have given examples. Both poems employ striking imagery to create a powerful sense of place. Reeves describes the toadstool wood as an isolated quite place, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Engl. 102 Poetry Essay "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" a Review English 102 Liberty University 4/21/2014 Poetry Thesis and Outline While reviewing "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", it should be noted that the key is the rhythm of the language. The first, second, and fourth sentence rime while the third sentence of each rimes with the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd sentence of the next stanza. In relation with the cryptic language draws the question, there is a more sinister back drop of loneliness and depression in this poem much deeper than the level of nature orated by the Narator. I. First Stanza A. Frost opens with describing who's woods we are viewing 1. Does it matter who's woods B. No one is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Frost further points out that the stretch of woods being viewed is very rural. This is made possible by the reference to the location between the woods and frozen lake. In closing the final sentence of the second stanza Frost reiterates the fact that this occurs on "the darkest evening of the year" stating the darkness of the mood. In the following stanza Frost returns to the horse, which "gives his harness bells a shake". This is the first of only two sounds listed in the entire poem. Sounds might normally be associated with a person in a lighter more jovial mood. Frost uses the lack of sound to put the narrator into what appears to be a deep process of thought. As the poem moves further allon it is clear that Frost is not thinking of other sounds or even the feelings which would be associated with this type of event. There is no mention of the temperature only the implication of the snow falling, and the frozen lake. Yet the sounds are slightly present, similar to an athlete who is preparing for the event. Frost is quiet, internalizing his thoughts, focusing on the task at hand, and not sensing the other areas of life in the world around him.
  • 35. In the fourth and final stanza Frost uses the riming of all four sentences to draw the reader into the climax of the poem, "the woods are lovely dark and deep/ But I have promises to keep/ and miles to go before I sleep/ and miles to go before I sleep". This grouping leads the reader to feel that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Essay Biography of Robert Frost "Rightly or wrongly, Robert Frost has achieved a reputation as a poet of nature..." (Gerber 155). Yes, Frost does use imagery of nature in his poems, but to say he is a "nature poet" is distorting his poetry by overlooking the poem's darker complexions (Gerber 155). An aspect of his poems that is frequently overlooked is the main character's internal conflict. In "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" characters are faced with an inner conflict metaphorically described by nature. In these two poems Frost uses nature to hide the reality of how self–conscious the main character actually is. Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. When his father died in 1885 he moved to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He spoke in the Yankee idioms of theNew England area (Michalowski). "Mention the poetry of Robert Frost to anyone...and images of idyllic New England scenes come to mind: cobbled streets that shine in the moonlight, a sleigh ride in winter woods..." (De Fusco 13) but " he is more than a New England poet: he is more than an American poet; he is a poet who can be understood anywhere..." (Van Doren). In all of Robert Frost's poetry there is a use of metaphor. " 'Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening'...is about self –consciousness...about a man turned from nature by the demands of a man–made world" (Wakefield). The major problem of the poem is why the speaker pauses by the woods. The answer is the lure of the dark, impenetrable, snow–filled woods is at once the lure of beauty and the lure of death (Sweeny and Lindroth 52). All of these problems are taking place within the main characters head. The scene of "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" is a cold, snowy evening in early winter. The man in the story is looking around his neighbor's woods with his horse (Sweeny and Lindroth 50). As soon as the poem begins "there are conflicts set up in the first and second stanzas. "The first conflict is between the poet and the owner of the woods [...] the second conflict is between the poet and his horse" (Sweeny and Lindroth 51). These conflicts are all divided into three different sections of the poem (De Fusco 93). In the first section, a man is in the
  • 37. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Robert Frost A Snowy Evening with Robert Frost Robert Frost once said, "It begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a loneliness. It is never a thought to begin with. It is at best when it is a tantalizing vagueness." ("Poetry Foundation" n.d.). This poem holds a lot of mystery in its meaning which has a variety of interpretations. John T. Ogilvie who wrote, "From Woods to Stars: A pattern of Imagery inRobert Frost's Poetry" interprets this as a poem about the journey through life. James G. Hepburn who wrote, "Robert Frost and His Critics" took a different approach. He believes this poem to be about the aesthetics and moral action. This poem contains a variety of literary devices that not only describe the scenery but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As Hepburn says in his article, "Robert Frost and His Critics" "The mood that the poem induces in the reader nullifies his acceptance of the intention expressed by the traveler. The sum of the reader's experience of the poem is different from the meaning of the traveler's experience of the woods. Presumably the traveler goes home to supper, to his duties, and to the rest of his journey through life; but these things are not the poem." Frost made some comments on the factors mood plays in a poem, "... the poet's intention is of course a particular mood that won't be satisfied with anything less than its own fulfillment." (Hepburn 1962). This poem isn't a recreated experience but meant to be an experience in itself. This poem has some interesting symbolism in it takes us on a journey through a man's life. When the narrator first stops, instead of questioning himself, he questions what the horse thinks, "My little horse must think it queer" (842). By questioning the horse, he is really questioning his own reasons, which people often do while they make life decisions or everyday decisions. The horse is also a symbol of time the horse is questioning his stopping and urges him to move on to prevent the further loss of time (Anonymous). When the narrator's horse shakes his harness bells, he then becomes a symbol, as John Ciardi thinks, "..order of life that does not understand why a man stops in the winter middle of nowhere to watch snow come ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Snow Imagery in “Desert Places” and “Stopping by Woods on... Robert Frost (1874– 1963). Robert Frost "was the most widely admired and highly honoured American poet of the 20th century (Eiermann)." Robert Frost was raised in rural New England where he grew a fond love for the outdoors and nature (Merriman). His love with nature elements has probably overwhelmed him so much that it has been reflected upon in many of his poems such as "The Tuft of Flowers," "Reluctance," and "Birches." One of the nature imageries that have been used frequently by Robert Frost is the snow imagery. Although the snow imagery appears in many other poems by Frost we will be dealing with the poems "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." Even though "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is also because of the mysteriousness of the woods being "lovely, dark, and deep (Frost, Stopping., line 13)" that makes the speaker mesmerized. The snow in this poem gave the speaker calmness by the woods and gives the poem the mood of welcome and mysteriousness whereas in "Desert Places" the snow establishes the mood of loneliness and emptiness. Therefore, if the snow imagery made the mood of the poems different, then evidently the snow imagery will make the themes of the two poems different as well. From the different manipulations of the snow imagery on the moods in "Desert Places" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" it made their themes distinctly different from each other. The snow that surrounded the speaker in "Desert Places" made the field look like an open, empty, lonely place. It is from the surroundings that the speaker creates his own loneliness. From this, it is clear that the speaker's loneliness inside himself/ herself overwhelms them so much that it causes their outlook to be of only loneliness. So in "Desert Places" the theme is that the loneliness that is created from within of the speaker causes him/her to realize or see the loneliness that is inside them and also the loneliness that surrounds them, which is nature. In "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Analysis Of Robert Frost 's `` Stopping By Woods On A... Robert Frost was an American poet born on March 26, 1874. Living to the age of eighty eight, Frost was able to become an accomplished poet in his lifetime, creating beautiful works of art through his words. In many of his poems one can find similar themes that discuss intense feelings and ideas about isolation and loneliness in one's life, such as in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Mending Wall". Each of the following poems discussed will demonstrate that throughout Robert Frost's poetry one can find an overarching theme of loneliness and isolation for the speaker. As the case with many writers, their inspiration and shared themes between works can be related back to their life events and struggles. In the case of Robert Frost this rings true. "Born in San Francisco, his mother suffered from broken family and depression, and his father was an alcoholic. (Brown). In addition to this: "because his father was a violent drunk, Frost as a child witnessed the fury and rage of his father on a regular basis... [to a point where] William became brutal, smashing furniture and yelling. It was not an unusual occurrence for Isabelle to run into the streets with her children to find refuge in the home of a neighbor" (Dreese). These factors could play a key role to the themes of isolation and loneliness in his poetry because they directly reflect the life events of Frost. Growing up with a violent and alcoholic father along with a depressed mother could not be easy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. The Use of Literary Devices in Robert Frost's Stopping by... The Use of Literary Devices in Robert Frost's Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening In Robert Frost's poem. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." the speaker uses literary devices to show the reader the poem's meaning. Symbolism plays an important role in this poem. Robert Frost uses symbolism to show the correlation between the woods and village with heaven. Mythological symbolism is also found in this poem. when the speaker talks about the lake. it is a reference to Hel in Norse Mythology. The tone of the poem, and Robert Frost's syntax. portray a tranquil yet dark feeling throughout the poem. The observations made exhibit how the speaker views life and death. The personification of the horse shows how the horse is important... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... and his conscience does not think that this thought is normal. The farm house represents a point in life, something the speaker is not trying to reach. Robert Frost writes the poem using iambic tetrameter. which follows the beat of a horse. The rhythm of the poem further alludes that the horse is a part of the speaker. Death is further mentioned in the poem when the speaker says. "In between the woods and frozen lake"(7) . In Norse Mythology. the underworld is called Hel. and is located in the frozen region of Niflheim. Robert Frost puts Hel and Heaven near each other to show how close the boundaries between the two are. The "darkest evening of the year" (8) shows how deep the speaker's depression is. This depression bolsters the speaker's suicidal thoughts. These thoughts connect to the thin line between Heaven and Hel. In the third stanza of the poem, the horse, the speaker's conscience, realizes the speaker's intention, and interrupts the the tranquil surroundings. When the horse gives it's harness bells a shake (9), it is trying to gain the speaker's attention. The speaker believes that the horse is trying to make the man realize how bad an idea suicide would be, as that would cause him to go to Hel (10). The speaker acknowledges the horses intent, and realizes the foolishness of suicide. Sensory imagery is used to show how easy suicide would be. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42. Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening Analysis In the modern day world there is an ongoing argument whether love is good or bad in nature. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is a simple poem that was not originally written to create an underlying message of love, but due to the popularity of Robert Frost's work it has and still is being critiqued comprehensively. This paper will prove thatRobert Frost is not referring to loving another person in particular but the narrator's peaceful surroundings in the woods. Although, the literary techniques used in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" create a peaceful environment for the reader, the stop in the wilderness creates a dilemma with the narrator's state of mind. Having considered the case of love the narrator is feeling, it is evident of what is being adored in this poem. The title alone alerts the reader of the place, setting and the basic theme of the story. The woods seem to exhibit a calmness and tranquility that encourages the protagonist to stop his journey and rest and in reality, the wilderness represents madness and darkness in the world. Frost opens the first stanza with the self conscious narrator thinking to himself, "Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though"(1–2). The man's insecurity naturally causes him to be uneasy but the solitude in the woods creates the affection that awes him. Since this story is told from the narrator's point of view, the reader can now infer that the protagonist is not thinking clearly due to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 43. The Career and Influences of Robert Frost 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 was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. Frost was born to his father, William Prescott Frost, a professional journalist and his mother, Isabelle Moodie. As Frost grows older, he starts to attend his first days at school. After not liking the first day of kindergarten in 1879 he drops out for the year. The next year, he drops out of school again. In 1881, he tries again for a third time to go to school as a second grader, but then he also drops out. From then on, he was homeschooled. On May 5, 1885, Frost's father dies of tuberculosis. After this tragedy, Frost and his family move to Lawrence, Massachusetts to live with his grandparents. He is forced to attend third grade and go to school. In 1886, his family moves to Salem Depot, New Hampshire. His mother begins teaching there and again he is forced to attend school but this time as a fifth grader. Frost completes middle school in 1889 at the top ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...