Thursday, October 10, 2019
Poetic Style of Robert Frost
Robert Lee Frost, New Englandââ¬â¢s cherished poetââ¬â¢s, has been called Americaââ¬â¢s purest classical lyricist and one of the outstanding poets of the twentieth century. He was a modernist poet. During his childhood he thrived in English and Latin classes and discovered a common thread in Theocritus' and Virgilââ¬â¢s poetry, and in the romantic balladry. Frostââ¬â¢s style was influenced by the early romantic poets as we can see the romantic features in his poems and also by the contemporary British poets as Edward Thomas, Rupert Brooke and Robert Graves.Many of his poems had to do with nature and transcendentalism. ââ¬Å"Of all his poetic elements, Frost's style seems the hardest to pin down. Actually one cannot pin it down, but something could be said to further our un-enlightenmentâ⬠, says Lawrence Thompson. He then moves on to state what Frost said about style in a letter to his friend Louis Untermeyer dated March 10, 1924, ââ¬Å"style in prose or verse is that which indicates how the writer takes himself and what he is sayingâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ¦. His style is the way he carries himself toward his ideas and deeds.â⬠Randall Jarrell a poet/critic praised Frostââ¬â¢s style as, ââ¬Å"No other living poet has written so well about the actions of ordinary man. â⬠The essential element of Frost's style is his choice of words or diction. He uses everyday (simple) words you would use in conversation. Frost writes his sentences with meter and rhythm to increase their beauty. His style also comprises of various elements such as lyric and narrative, with characters, background and imagery drawn from New England, choice of rural (pastoral) subjects and realistic depiction of ordinary life and people.He also uses many poetic devices adding to the craftsmanship of the poem. Language used in his poems is simple and rustic. Frost is universally recognized for being a pastoral poet who deals with the subject of everyday life of the humble dwel lers in the countryside with their works and loved ones, with their joys and sorrows, and the background setting is nature. Many of his most famous poems (such as ââ¬Å"Mending Wallâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Eveningâ⬠) are inspired by the natural world, particularly his time spent as a poultry farmer in New Hampshire.Ironically, until his adulthood in New England, Frost was primarily a ââ¬Å"city boyâ⬠who spent nearly all of his time in an urban environment. It is possibly because of his late introduction to the rural side of New England that Frost became so intrigued by the pastoral world. Frost states that ââ¬Å"Poetry is more often of the country than the cityâ⬠¦Poetry is very, very rural ââ¬â rustic. It might be taken as a symbol of man, taking its rise from individuality and seclusion ââ¬â written first for the person that writes and then going out into its social appeal and use.â⬠à Yet Frost does not express pastoral only i n terms of beauty, as in a traditional sense. Instead, he also emphasizes the harsh conflicts of the natural world: the clash between urban and rural lifestyles as seen in his poem ââ¬Å"Mending Wallâ⬠. Frostââ¬â¢s poetry is simple and clear. Richard Wilbur points out ââ¬Å"it is not written in the colloquial language of an uneducated farm boy, but rather in a beautifully refined and charged colloquial language. â⬠Poems are said to be lyric, narrative or dramatic and Frost wrote in all these three forms.Lyric poetry's are usually short; expressing personal thoughts and feelings, and it is spoken by single speaker about his own feelings for an object or a person. For example ââ¬ËMowing' is a lyrical sonnet where Frost talks about the speaker's own opinion or rather ideas about the sound a scythe makes mowing hay in a field by a forest, and what this sound might signify. Narrative poetry tells us a story of a single event. For example: ââ¬ËOut, Out' is a narrativ e in blank verse written in a continuous structure where Frost talks about the death of a boy in a farm (accident).Dramatic poems have speaking characters as in a little play. Frost's dramatic poems fall under four categories- ballads, linear narratives, dramatic monologues, and dramatic narratives. One of Frost's famous poems ââ¬ËThe Death of a Hired Man' is an example for dramatic narrative which is written in blank verse. Frost has written many poems with speakers engaged in conversation like ââ¬ËA Hundred Collars' and ââ¬ËThe Death Of A Hired Man', he has always been interested in distinguishing New England speakers who are highly characterized in his poems because he was born in San Francisco and spent his early years there..ââ¬Å"I could enumerate more derivations in Frost's conversational style, but the point is that this style doesnââ¬â¢t try to imitate the inconsequentialities of spoken discourseâ⬠(Charney, Maurice. 1). Charney also stated ââ¬Å"Frost is not at all like David Mamet or Harold Pinter, although these two dramatists are probably just as far from the realities of everyday conversation as Frost. â⬠His use of ordinary conversational style is tremendous. Symbolic and metaphorical devices are one of the elements of Frost's poetic style.Frost said, ââ¬Å"Every poem I write is figurative in two senses. It will have figures in it, of course; but it's also a figure in itself ââ¬â a figure for something, and it's made so that you can get more than one figure out of it. ââ¬Å"(Cook Voices p235). The use of metaphorical devices in Frost's poetry is more obvious. Metaphor is a figure of speech in which a comparison is made between two things which are not alike. In most of his poems we can see the use of metaphors; he is notably a poet of metaphors more than anything else.For example: In the poem ââ¬ËPutting in the seed' the planting of seed in the garden, in spring time is like (compared to) making love, in another poem of Frost called ââ¬ËDevotion. ââ¬Ë the passive but ever-changing shore and the persistent energetic ocean are compared to a devoted couple. .Frost said,â⬠Poetry begins in trivial metaphors, pretty metaphors, ââ¬Ëgrace metaphors,' and goes on to the profoundest thinking that we have. Poetry provides the one permissible way of saying one thing and meaning another. People say, ââ¬ËWhy don't you say what you mean?'We never do that, do we, being all of us too much poets. We like to talk in parables and in hints and in indirections ââ¬â whether from diffidence or from some other instinctâ⬠. â⬠¦ Excerpt from an essay entitled ââ¬Å"Education by Poetryâ⬠by Robert Frost. Symbolic representation may be an object, person, situation or action which stands for something else more abstract. For example: In the poem ââ¬ËStopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' even though there is no one overt symbol in the poem, the entire journey can represent life's jo urney. ââ¬Å"Dark woodsâ⬠also become a powerful recurring symbol in Frost.There are certain signature images that become symbols when we look at Frost's work namely, trees, birds and birdsongs, solitary travelers, etc. Inspired by the romantic poets, Frost's works influence romantic features as in the use of imagery. Poetry indirectly appeals to our senses through imagery. Frostââ¬â¢s use of ââ¬Å"the sound of senseâ⬠is most successful because of the clarity and colloquial nature of his poetry. It is only because of this clarity that Frost is able to explore topics of emotion, struggle, and conflict that would be incomprehensible in any other form.
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