Robert Frost and His Creative Life A very famous poet, Robert Frost, inherited his name from the southern Civil War hero Robert E. Lee (Bloom 7). Like this hero, he is woven into the fabric of our nation. He was a man who started out with humble beginnings and became very famous and very well-known. Robert Frost has been noted as one of the major poets of the twentieth century (Bloom 1). His works earned him four Pulitzer Prizes, a reading of his poetry to President John F. Kennedy at his inauguration, and the Congressional Gold Medal (Biography.com 1-2). Despite these awards, he wrote because of what moved him in his lifetime. Many impactful life events, which included his fondness of farming, the griefs he experienced, and the happiness …show more content…
However, all these experiences influenced his style of poetry. Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California, where he spent the first eleven years of his life (Biography.com 1). His younger sister, Jeanie, and Robert were born to Isabelle Moodie Frost and William Prescott Frost, Jr. (Poets.org 1). He started to write poems when he was just a teenager at Lawrence High School (Pritchard 1). Frost married his high school love, Elinor White, on December 19, 1895 and they had six children (Biography.com 1-2). Robert and his family lived on a farm in New Hampshire that was given to them by his grandfather (Biography.com 1). While living in New Hampshire, the Frosts experienced the death of their first and sixth born children, as well as several unsuccessful farming endeavors (Biography.com 2). Their family eventually moved to England where Robert met many great friends and fellow poets who influenced his writing, including Ezra Pound, Edward Thomas, and Frank Flint (Wooten). While in England, Frost …show more content…
One of the keenest literary thinkers of his time was Edward Thomas, one of Robert Frost’s best friends (Orr 4). Frost’s poem “The Road Not Taken” was inspired by the walks that Frost and Thomas would take along the English countryside. After choosing which path to take, Thomas would always regret not taking the other path. (Orr 3). Frost would tease his friend for having wasted regrets. (Krishna 1). In the poem, Frost implies that when we come to a fork in the road, we will always wonder what would happen if we took “the one less traveled