In fact, both the tragedy and living in a farm shaped one of his poems, “The Impulse”. That is, where he used nature and sorrow to tell a story about a woodsman and his wife. The woodsman was always working and his wife was left duties to fulfill around the house, and when she was done, she left “And followed where he …show more content…
They call it ‘Isolation of the Individual’ to depict how Frost use a character and isolate them from society and into a trial of depression. In this case, he used a woodsman and turned him into a workaholic which leaves his wife lonely and Frost wrote her to sink into this pain that forces her to leave the house while he’s away. And when the woodsman comes home and sees that she is gone, he searches for her and eventually find out she died. Frost created this poem to send the message that you shouldn’t take things for granted no matter what it is, because one day it’ll be there and before you know it, it’s gone.
Lastly, as a result on Frost’s poetic and empathic writing skills, he impacted the readers immensely. One critic says, “Robert Frost seems to me the greatest of the American poets of this century”. In contrast, another critic offered a different opinion, “The problem with Robert Frost’s narrative poems is that they are told from a southerner’s view, and that is boring”. The opinions of these two critics don’t solidify Frost’s poems, but instead offer perspectives viewed from two sides of his literature: the fans of his work and the ones who beg to