“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” - Albert Einstein. Robert Frost uses nature to understand things that happen in his life. Nature has impacted his poems greatly, it has helped him write about life’s questions, death and loneliness. Robert Frost a well-known poet, born on March 26, 1874, in San Francisco. When Frost was eleven, his father died and his mother moved him to New England (Robert Frost). These two experiences affected his writing in the future. In 1984 the New York Independent his poem “My Butterfly,” his first poem to be published (Robert Frost). In 1890 he first son died, this tragedy lead to his next poem “Home Burial” (Robert Frost). He later moved to England to “write and be poor without further scandal in the family”. Frost eventually moved back to Massachusetts where he died on January 29 1963 (Robert Frost). After his son's death, Robert Frost had a tough time so his grandfather bought him a farm in New Hampshire. He did this not only to make his life easier but his grandfather wanted Frost to find a real job instead of writing poems, and become a farmer (Robert Frost). Moving onto this farm did just the opposite. Robert Frost got his first taste of rural New England life and the nature influenced his …show more content…
In some of his poems he answers life's questions through nature. One of the poems Frost answered life's questions in was “Nothing Gold Can Stay”. In this poem he his saying that nothing that is good or perfect can last for ever. He says this using nature when he says “Her early Leafs a flower; but only so an hour” “Nothing Gold Can Stay”. What he means by this is flowers bloom and look great but they do not last forever. Another example of this is when Frost says “Natures first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold” “Nothing Gold Can Stay”. Robert Frost’s saying that nature's first green is perfect but is can not hold onto it’s