Reflections Within is a non-traditional stanzaic poem made up of five stanzas containing thirty-four lines that do not form a specific metrical pattern. Rather it is supported by its thematic structure. Each of the five stanzas vary in the amount of lines that each contain. The first stanza is a sestet containing six lines. The same can be observed of the second stanza. The third stanza contains eight lines or an octave. Stanzas four and five are oddly in that their number of lines which are five and nine.…
In the poem “Poem”, muMs da Schemer gives critiques on society as a whole as having inadequate functionality, lacking the necessary building blocks needed to progress and also gives descriptions of his personal experiences and characteristics that represent the person who he is today. The poet muMs da Schemer breaks down his poem into three different stanzas with a total of twenty lines. The style used is short yet informative and directly to the point with vast descriptions. His description of himself gives off a well-rounded, stern individual who came from “where fights is born” (4). The tone during the poem is very assertive, very sure about what defines him as a person positive about what may or may not represent him and shows how he is not weak nor easily torn down. These critiques along with Schemer’s representation can be exemplified throughout his use of alliteration, rhyme scheme and imagery.…
Robert Lee Frost was one of America 's leading 20th-century poets and a four-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. An essentially pastoral poet often…
Dating back to as far as the epic of Gilgamesh, literature has explored the most prevalent aspect of human existence, journeys. Everything is a journey in life; we go through journeys to discover things about ourselves and the world around us. It’s said that to truly learn something you have to do it yourself, but we don’t have the time to go on enough journeys to quench our cravings for answers. That’s why literature has offered us the chance to learn something, without actually doing it, so that we can learn the message from a journey, without actually going on it.…
Frost is an important writer due to the fact that he helped renew popular interest in American poetry by refusing to write with the academic modernist style used at the time, he chose to be different. Frost wrote about nature and rural life in a traditional yet complex way that grabbed the interest of many people. Some of his best works that I particularly like include “The Road Not Taken”, “Home Burial”, and “Fire and Ice”. These poems Frost wrote helped form the conception of Americans as tough, self-sufficient individuals. “Home Burial” was about the overwhelming grief after the death of a child. Frost knew and experienced this first hand due to the loss of quite a few people. “Fire and Ice” considers the apocalyptic end of the world.…
Robert Frost is one of the most well-known American poets that has ever lived. According to the article “The Themes of Robert Frost”, “we know the labels [of Frost] which have been used: nature poet, New England Yankee, symbolist, humanist, skeptic, synecdochist, anti-Platonist, and many others” (Warren 1). The author of this article, Robert Penn Warren, notifies the readers that one cannot solely base their thoughts of Robert Frost’s work on his labels. He states, “(...) the important thing about a poet is never what kind of label he wears. It is what kind of poetry he writes” (Warren 1). In other words, trying to look beyond the labels of…
Robert Frost is one of the most recognizable names in American Poetry. His work is consistently used in literature textbooks and lectures as a staple of poetic excellence. Frost’s work was so compelling that he is one of the few poets to have his work taught to students while he was still living. Much of Frost’s work contains similar themes. Death, discontent, and questions of the world’s social order are common for the poet. The Mending Wall (1914), Once by the Pacific (1928) and Design (1936) are just a few examples that illustrate the darker side of Frost’s psyche.…
He includes Literal meanings in his poetry and also hidden meanings. He likes to give the reader messages after they read his poems. From his poetry we see allusion, imagery, and symbolism in his poetry to give the reader feelings while reading. Robert Frost is considered to be one of the greatest poets of the 20th century,…
Tragedies occur every second on Earth. People die, disappear, and get hurt daily. Robert Frost experienced a lot of tragedy throughout Frost’s life. Although Frost became an extremely famous and well-known poet, many tragedies were faced during Frost’s lifetime. Although full of tragedy, Robert Frost’s life, career, and legacy all still remain an important part of literature history.…
A rhyme is defined as a verse or poetry having correspondence in the terminal sounds of the lines. One of the best examples of a poet that mastered rhyming beautifully was Robert Frost. Robert Frost was one of the best poets of the twentieth century. He is highly admired for his work about rural life and command for the English language. While many poets like to free verse their poetry, Robert Frost normally does not. One of the main characteristics that contribute to why Robert Frost is such a good poet is his ability to develop rhyme schemes and the sense of rhythm it creates throughout his poetry.…
Like most of Frost’s poems, this poem adopts the tone of a simple New England farmer contemplating an everyday sight, (History, 2009). I am sure this poem had an incredible story behind it very similar to the other two poems that I have discussed throughout this paper. This poem, being my most favorite written by Frost, unfortunately had no specific answer as to why it was written. I mean I understand that Frost did not want to give away all of his reasons and secrets as to why he wrote poetry for personal reasons, but he should have known that people would wonder in the future. I wonder if it is because he himself did not expect to become such a success from his…
In Jack Frost's "A Considerable Speck", the speaker is a writer who, before completing his piece notices "a speck that would have been beneath my sight" (line 1). Initially, the speaker remarks, the writer "poised my pen in air to stop it with a period of ink" before this microscopic mite grabbed the writer's attention and "made me think" (Lines 4-5). The speaker is in aw and is fascinated with the minute creature as it races across his white sheet of paper. "With inclination it could call its own...Then paused again and either drank or smelt" (lines 10 & 13). The reader carefully examines the actions of the mite in detail, as if it were a complex being with emotions and intelligence. The imagery used by the speaker is vivid in description describing the mite in detail. Phrases such as "paused again and either drank or smelt...With loathing, for again it turned to fly" aids the reader in visualizing the actions of the mite. A Considerable Speck is divided into three distinct stanzas each entailing a different aspect of the speaker's contemplation of the mite. In stanza I, the speaker describes the mite using imagery, evoking lifelike images in the mind. In stanza II, the speaker's attitude towards the "speck" is introduced. Stanza III concludes the poem with the speaker's justification for not killing the helpless mite. In A Considerate Speck the speaker expresses his thought of a mite with detailed description of its actions and proposed feelings. The speaker uses figurative language in this poem to describe the mite whilst providing the reader with a source of pleasure in the exercise of the imagination.…
Who’s Robert Frost? Where did he grow up, or what did he even do? Well Robert Frost did many things in his life, but he’s best known for his phenomenal poetry, writing deep, realistic, and traditional poems.…
Robert Frost’s poem The Vantage Point tells of a man who is lost in the world of people so seeks refuge in nature. A vantage point is a viewpoint from which someone is able to see a wide range of things. The vantage point in the poem is where the man goes to watch the human world while remaining separate from it. Robert Frost could relate to the man in the poem as he spent most of his life as an outcast living apart from everyone else. Since Robert Frost failed as a poet and most of other things he tried in life, he was set apart from society and found himself and comfort in nature.…
“Half the world is composed of people who have something to say and can't, and the other half who have nothing to say and keep on saying it.” This is one of many quotes by Robert Frost. He defied his quote in all of his poetry. Robert Frost surely had something to say to the world and he delivered his message through all of his great works. Throughout his poems Robert Frost uses imagery to develop strong pieces of literature. His imagery appeals further then our senses; he develops a poem which is filled with deep meaning, a poem which captures feelings and beliefs. In his poems Frost also uses nature to represent several things in his poems. Once understood the poem becomes a much better experience for the reader. His poems, once read, become wonderful works which will stay with you forever.…