Posted on March 26, 2021
This is an update of my post published on March 26, 2010:
Born on this day in 1874, Robert Frost is still one of the most-read, most-quoted, and most-loved American poets of all time. He's also one of the most honored: he received four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry in his lifetime.
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California, but he moved to New England when he was a teen; he lived in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont; Scotland and England; and Michigan and Florida.
Although Frost attended prestigious universities (Dartmouth and Harvard), he never graduated from college. It's not that he didn't do well at his studies--he did--but he had to leave to support his family. So, no graduation means no diploma, right? Wrong! Frost earned more than 40 honorary degrees, including one from Harvard and two from Dartmouth.
Other honors came his way, too; during his lifetime, buildings and schools were named for him, and Frost was chosen to read one of his poems at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy.
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California, but he moved to New England when he was a teen; he lived in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont; Scotland and England; and Michigan and Florida.
Although Frost attended prestigious universities (Dartmouth and Harvard), he never graduated from college. It's not that he didn't do well at his studies--he did--but he had to leave to support his family. So, no graduation means no diploma, right? Wrong! Frost earned more than 40 honorary degrees, including one from Harvard and two from Dartmouth.
Other honors came his way, too; during his lifetime, buildings and schools were named for him, and Frost was chosen to read one of his poems at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy.
I was lucky enough to visit the cemetery in which Robert Frost was buried. I say “lucky” because I didn't know he was buried there and was just exploring a cool old graveyard in Bennington, Vermont.
I was startled - and then moved - to find his grave!
Frost's epitaph is a line from one of his poems: “I had a lover's quarrel with the world.”
Celebrate Frost
One of Frost's most famous poems is “The Road Not Taken.” (Here is a YouTube video of the poem being read by Alan Bates.)
Read the poem, listen to it, and think about or discuss its meaning. Is there just one meaning?
Celebrate Frost
One of Frost's most famous poems is “The Road Not Taken.” (Here is a YouTube video of the poem being read by Alan Bates.)
Read the poem, listen to it, and think about or discuss its meaning. Is there just one meaning?
One time I read that songwriter Paul Simon, when asked what a particular song meant, refused to explain his meaning. He basically said that he had done his part in writing the song, now listeners had to do their part. I think what he meant is that there isn't one "correct” meaning; instead, there are lots of possible meanings, because we each create our own meaning.
I think the same thing could be said about poetry, and from what I can tell by reading what Frost said about his poems, it certainly seems to be true of “The Road Not Taken.” The poem ends with the lines, “I took the one less traveled by / And that has made all the difference.” Because of these two lines, most people think the poem is a statement that people should be individuals, strike out on their own “path,” and avoid going along with “the crowd.”
However, many people say that the last line is ironic - that the poem says that the decision about which path to take made little or no difference! Those who believe in the ironic explanation say that the poem comments on how people tend to defend their past choices by rationalizing them.
However, many people say that the last line is ironic - that the poem says that the decision about which path to take made little or no difference! Those who believe in the ironic explanation say that the poem comments on how people tend to defend their past choices by rationalizing them.
Frost called this poem tricky, and he said that in part it was a “private jest” aimed at people who were sure he would live to regret the choices he'd made. It also seems to have been a private joke on Frost's friend Edward Thomas; the two used to take walks through the forest, and Thomas always complained at the end that they should have taken a different path. We have some of the letters between Frost and Thomas; evidence indicates that Frost expected his friend to get the joke, but Thomas did not.
Read, enjoy...maybe even LOVE more Robert Frost poems!
"Gathering Leaves” is good, and I think “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” is even better!
My top favorite Frost poem is "Nothing Gold Can Stay."
I love this jigsaw puzzle of the U.S.!
It's a big difficult, but the fact that Frost's poem is printed on the states makes it MUCH easier to solve!
Write poems of your own
See if you can express a real emotion with simple words. What makes you really upset, sad, or angry? What fills you with joy?
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