Robert Frost
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Robert Frost
Robert Frost is often referred to as a poet of nature. Words and phrases such as
fire and ice, flowers in bloom, apple orchards and rolling hills, are all
important elements of Frost's work. Remove them and something more than symbols
are taken away. These ‘benign' objects provide an alternative way to look at
the world and are often used as metaphors to describe a darker view of nature
and humans. In Frost's poetry, the depth is as important as the surface. The
darker aspects of Frost's poetry are often portrayed through the use of
symbolism, vivid imagery, and selective word choice. Frost's poems appear to be
simple on the surface, yet upon further scrutiny the poems reveal themselves as
elusive. Frost utilizes ordinary objects to create a deeper meaning. For
example, the poem "Mending Wall", appears to be about the differences
between two neighbors and their ideas on rebuilding a wall. On the other hand,
the wall may be viewed, in a more general sense, as a symbol to represent all
the antagonistic or mistrustful barriers that divide man from man. "The
gaps I mean / No one has seen them made or heard them made / But at spring
mending-time we find them there" (lines 9-11), illustrates the point that
people become separated without even realizing it because we become so caught up
in what is happening in our own lives. The darkness, held within the afore
mentioned quotation, is the feeling of sadness. The fact that we do not take
notice of one another creates a place that becomes more and more divided by
differences. Likewise, the poem "Nothing Gold Can Stay" seems to
represent the change of seasons. But further analysis reveals that the speaker
is also paralleling the cycles of life with the change in seasons. "So dawn
goes down to day" (7) illustrates that in life as in nature, golden moments
fade away. "Then leaf subsides to leaf" (5) implies autumn, when the
leaves begin to turn gold and fall to the ground. The color gold represents the
end of life, whereas green represents new life. The poem also illustrates the
loss of innocence. As the seasons change, life progresses and innocence can no
longer be sustained. Autumn represents death. The changes in the color of the
leaves are often viewed as beautiful even though it marks the end of a season.
The end to human life creates overwhelming feelings of anxiety and uncertainty.
Death, for some people, is a taboo subject. People are not overly comfortable
discussing death because of the emotion...
The complete article is about 968 words and 3.87 pages long.
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