25 pages • 50 minutes read
Robert FrostA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In his first book, A Boy’s Will, Frost often used elevated 19th-century language to express his thoughts. In one of the last poems in the collection, “A Tuft of Flowers,” Frost used more colloquial language that was commonplace amongst those in New England. When he wrote North of Boston, he primarily used this type of speech, while still employing iambic pentameter and blank verse. Frost’s blending of the old (iambic blank verse) with the new (everyday speech and location) was innovative for the time, creating poems that sounded epic yet familiar. The couple’s fraught dialogue regarding their son’s death has both an intimacy due to its domestic subject and a timelessness due to the even meter, despite the occasional deviations that critics point out. Katherine Kearns, for instance, has noted, “of the husband's forty-nine lines, fifteen are extrasyllabic; of the wife’s forty-one lines, seventeen are extrasyllabic” and how these differences are “used by Frost within the dialogue to reveal the uncontrol and frustration of both husband and wife” (Kearns, Katherine. “On ‘Home Burial.’” Modern American Poetry).
By Robert Frost
Acquainted with the Night
Acquainted with the Night
Robert Frost
After Apple-Picking
After Apple-Picking
Robert Frost
A Time To Talk
A Time To Talk
Robert Frost
Birches
Birches
Robert Frost
Dust of Snow
Dust of Snow
Robert Frost
Fire and Ice
Fire and Ice
Robert Frost
Mending Wall
Mending Wall
Robert Frost
Nothing Gold Can Stay
Nothing Gold Can Stay
Robert Frost
October
October
Robert Frost
Once by the Pacific
Once by the Pacific
Robert Frost
Out, Out—
Out, Out—
Robert Frost
Putting in the Seed
Putting in the Seed
Robert Frost
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Robert Frost
The Death of the Hired Man
The Death of the Hired Man
Robert Frost
The Gift Outright
The Gift Outright
Robert Frost
The Road Not Taken
The Road Not Taken
Robert Frost
West-Running Brook
West-Running Brook
Robert Frost