Robert Frost Duality

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The Duality of Poe Some people just get a bum rap. Robert Frost is one of those unfortunate souls. While he was the most visible and admired American poet of his day; his life was hard. It’s true that Robert was also an unusual farmer because acquired an immense amount of erudition. 1 His life was one of increasing professional success together with a heavy burden of personal anxiety and grief. Frost’s poems are usually based on everyday life and rural settings, making his poems. easily accessible. They are no mean simplistic, however, but run deep. Most people know Frost’s early career and long public experience as a speaker and lecturer. Frost cultivated his career as a philosophical, wry, and wise country poet. Expresses knowledge and concern …show more content…

4 Nature’s first green, which means; think about spring. “Nature’s first green is gold/ Her hardest hue to hold/ Her early leaf’s a flower/But only so an hour/Then leaf subsides to leaf.” (847) The speaker use “gold” so think of tree like the willow, but it also means another way is when the sunrise and make everything golfer than normal, how beautiful is it. The word “hardest holds” the idea of this word is something can’t hold or keeper, gold hue color for a short time until they turn green, so they don’t stay that way so everything changes over time. Frost mentions Eden, a beautiful garden, but that garden didn’t stay that beautiful way too long: 5 “So Eden sank to grief/So dawn goes down to day/ Nothing gold can stay”. The narrator is known that everything can’t stay too long if something bad happened it will change. Early spring leaves and flower’, the Garden of Eden, and dawn are all gold, and none of them can stay for very long in this world. It’s clear that Robert’s is not trust everything, he believes his life always change and nothing will stay the same and need to …show more content…

The narrator of “Acquainted with the Night” is his lonely as he walks the isolated city street at night, and feeling lonely. 6 He has walked beyond the city and along every city lane, but not found anything to comfort him and unwilling: “I have been on acquainted with the night/I have walked out in rain-and back in rain/I have outranked the furthest city light/I have look down the saddest city land/I have passed by the watching on his beat/and dropped my eye, unwilling to explain” (848). The narrator “dropped my eye” instead of looking directly at the watchman. And “unwilling to explain” is something the narrator could be hiding, and maybe he doesn’t want to let people know how he

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