Robert Frost Research Paper

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Robert Frost captivated, and still captivates, millions of people around the world with his poetry. His simplistic style and uniform verse made a stronghold for the poetry styles of old. In a modernist era full of imagery and abstraction, Frost brought readers back to old ideas, deeply rooted in nature and hard work. “He was a poet of traditional verse forms and metrics who remained steadfastly aloof from the poetic movements and fashions of his time” (The Line-Gang). He held a dislike for the new coming modernist styles that broke from the traditional poetry styles and replaced them with radical new abstract styles that were hard to read and took hours of studying to understand. He preferred a more simple and easy to understand style that …show more content…

Often when Frost’s works were not centered around nature, he chose to write about the common man and his struggle to survive. Stern states that “His poems have their base in the hard soil, the defiant nature of New England’s barren, rocky strips of land that a farmer of a dairyman has to fight and conquer to make a bare living”. Frost loved to provide a picture of the daily struggles that common people endured on their quest to survive. He took a special interest in the farmer or landowner which connects him to people of those trades or backgrounds. This also allows people of our modern era to have a look back in time at how people lived and the struggles that they endured. “The unrelieved monotony of the harshness of the farmer’s life is caught in all of its frustrations in Frost’s poems” (Stern). Often, Frost’s were individualized and set apart from the the people in the modern era that Frost lived in. It shows how Frost rejects the modernized way of life, just as he rejects modernist writing styles. The individualized subjects in his poems almost directly correlate how Frost individualized himself from the other poets of his time. He never associated with other poets or established a set writing style for himself. The article Robert Frost says that Frost’s protagonists are individuals who are constantly forced to confront their individualism as such and to reject the modern world to retain their identity. Frost also relates to common people by establishing a sense of connection between the average American and the subjects in his poems. “Frost’s regionalism creates a picture of regional unity or a sense of community” (Robert Frost). His works create a picture that people feel that they understand or can relate to. Lastly, Frost connects with common people because his writing style is simple and easier to understand. Stern says that people are intrigued by the simplicity of Frosts words and