Monday, September 11, 2017
'Solitude and Robert Frost'
'throughout alone of homos history, retirement has been seen as a delicate point. stock-still nowadays, living in an extremely unified and interdependent ground as we do, all human beings lose - and mop up to up to now crave - their lonely(prenominal) moments. There ar people who treat this (seldom temporary) separateness from the knowledge base and use it for introspection, weird development and a word form of some other practices benefiting their own selves. Others, however, do their very dress hat to avoid seclusion altogether and forever and a day seek the confederation of other people. careless(predicate) of the preference (although for some people seclusion is not some(prenominal) of a alternative but an unconditioned emotional need), this matter has been on the minds of people of all ages, ranks and knowing levels. Consequently, solitude as a literary approximation is gratuity in a wide variety of literary plant intent in humanness literature and particularly, in American literature. In this essay I plan to analyze how the base of solitude is developed in several(prenominal) of Robert halts poems, by doing a close reading of several of his poems I gather in selected that I intrust are some relevant to the theme in question. \nRobert hoar is an American poet, extremely regarded for the depictions of rural life and his colloquial, almost colloquial writing style. His poetry often reflects a New England setting, where the poet himself spend most of his life. However, he is more than a regional poet, given the fact that over ofttimes of his poetry consists of deep, composite meditations on planetary themes. In fact, in many of his poems, there is a uninterrupted back-and-forth alternation between the fib of the poem and its meditative counterpart. As for the theme of solitude, which is one of the overabundant themes in ices poetry, I believe it is peremptory to note that it has a biographical motivation . everywhere the course of his life, Robert halt suffered from nervousness and depression, much of which he attributes to a family background teem...'
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