"Robert frost personal response the road not taken" Essays and Research Papers

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    path. Continuous physical tasks will create a foundation of issues both physical and mental. Both Jean Toomer and Robert Frost wrote about the hardship that they faced when abiding the labor. Jean Toomer wrote “Harvest Song” about the farming lifestyle and the emotional repercussions that

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    The Wind And Window Flower‚ by Robert Frost‚ can be read on both the literal and symbolic level. On one hand this is a story of windy winter day. Of a window flower and a winter breeze. On the other hand‚ this is a story of heartbreak and unrequited love. A story of a man who falls in love with a woman who is to different from himself and has his heart broken when she will not return his love. The story begins with the narrator telling us to forget about our own love and listen to his story of

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    The Lockless Door by Robert Frost shows how an individual is either running away from his conscience or from opportunity. Although there are two sides in this poem‚ both sides are actually connected to each other in a way so that they make a circle. The Lockless Door show the past and the future at the same time. If the poem is the case of his conscience‚ then the individual is perhaps tortured or agonized by something of the past. Frost shows this theme when the door is knocked twice. The person

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    In the poem "Birches" by Robert FrostFrost attempts to illustrate a cycle of growing up from childhood to adulthood. According to Frost‚ through the use of childhood imagination one can easily endure the struggle we call life. "Birches" is separated into different sections‚ beginning with a description of a birch tree being bent under various conditions. The poem than continues to a farm boy’s childhood‚ where he is ’seen’ swinging on the birches‚ and lastly Frost describes his desires to return

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    by Robert Frost about a tragic event. Frost conveys the theme of his poem in the form of a story: a boy is working with a buzz saw‚ when he cuts his hand off with it when his sister calls him for supper. The loss of blood results in his unexpected death‚ and his family returns to their daily lives. The tragic event shows the boy’s sudden and premature loss of innocence‚ While narrating the story‚ the speaker implies that he sees the boy’s work as inhumane‚ especially with the buzz saw. Robert Frost

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    “Fire and Ice” by Robert Frost In this poem the author is talking about two really powerful and potentially destructive forces in the world‚ fire and ice. Both of these are two completely opposite elements. I think that the symbol of fire in Frost’s poem is representing desire‚ and passion. Meanwhile the symbol of ice is used to show hate and destruction. Similarly these elements and the emotions that they represent can be what take us to our breaking points. I believe that Frost is expressing

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    recollection of the sensations they embody. For example‚ fire elicits the feeling of heat and light‚ but also burning and pain. This particular image is well used by Frost to create a duality with both fire and ice that then draws attention to the nature of the warning he creates. Symbolism – Symbolism is the key to this poem. Frost very explicitly makes fire a symbol for desire‚ and ice a symbol for hate. This‚ coupled with the imagery that these symbols evoke‚ creates a multidimensional complexity

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    Robert Frost’s poem‚ "Birches‚" points out that at certain times in life‚ it can be good to go back to what was once simple and true‚ like when children swing on the branches of trees. The setting of the poem is winter time and Frost seems like an old man wishing to be back in his youth. This paper will examine Frost’s poem in depth to identify all the literary elements that are used. After the literary elements are identified‚ this paper will show how Frost himself wishes to be a child again

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    them into traumatic response. "Mending Wall" in the structure of North of Boston suggests‚ in its sharp contrasts to the dark tones of some of the major poems in the volume‚ the psychological necessity of sustaining imaginative ’supreme fictions’. It does not take more than one reading of the poem to understand that the speaker is not a country primitive who is easily spooked by the normal processes of nature. He knows very well what it is "that doesn’t love a wall" (frost‚ of course). His fun

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    Journeys are a multi-faceted concept which can result in both positive and negative outcomes. “A Righteous Day” (1988) by Mudrooroo and “A Road Not Taken” (1916)‚ both explore an inner journey as an implication of a physical journey. Composers of both poems have effectively articulated this inner self-realisation through a variety of language devices. Mudrooroo’s “A Righteous Day” encompasses a positive outcome of confidence as a result of a negative experience and their inner journey due to white

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