Robert Frost Research Paper

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Robert Frost is a renowned poet of his time. He took us to new heights with his work, as it often makes us think outside the box. Frost has won numerous amounts of prizes for his works, and also steps out of poetry. Showing us that he is very versatile when it comes to writing. Some loved him, and some didn’t agree with his style of work, but for the most part he was respected. Frost brought something new and very different to poetry, which will always keep him relevant. Robert Frost’s early life and a critiques of his work, give us an idea of what he and his poems are all about. Robert Lee Frost was born on March 26th, 1874 in San Francisco, CA. His father William Prescott Frost was a newspaper reporter and editor, and his mother Isabel …show more content…

After Frost was published his first book “A Boy’s Will” he immediately received great feedback. Ezra Pound an American expatriate showed his enthusiasm for the book and wrote two glowing reviews. In the Chicago little magazine Pound stated: “This man has the good sense to speak naturally and to paint the thing, the thing as he sees it (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). The book was quickly went from his hands, to the hands of William Butler Yeats whom stated that it was: “the best poetry written in America in a long time” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). Frost admired the work Yeats created, and on occasion met him. During the 1940’s and 50’s as his popularity continued to grow, it was almost as if the new critics dismissed the role he played in poetry. To them it was as if it was: “too superficial in content and too conventional in it use of traditional poetic meter and rhyme” ((Frost, Robert 1874-1963). As for Lionel Trilling and Randel Jarrel where able to divulge the “psychological complexity and modern sensibility of Frost’s poetry and helped to maintain his reputation as a major American poet” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). Critics like Lowell, and Pound, as well as others asked Frost: “why he did not write free verse, for it certainly would be easier for him to capture sounds of natural, everyday speech if he did not have to be concerned with adhering to a pre-established meter” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). In response to their question Frist stated that free verse was “like playing tennis without a net” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). Frost was able to share: “a worldview in which chaos prevailed and in which no cosmic order was possible” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). He also stated: “The most a poet could hope to create in a poem, was a brief point of order, a “momentary stray against confusion”” (Frost, Robert 1874-1963). According to Frost: “the irregular rhythms of speech were a metaphor for the world’s

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