Robert Frost -- Life Issues and Parallels to My Life
A Life Filled with Tragic Inspiration
Robert Frost was a prolific American writer and poet whose work captured the difficulties some of the most challenging periods in modern American history as well as his personal trials and tribulations. Frost's work is known for the eloquence that he was able to express using the simple language of common colloquial speech (Holman & Snyder, 2012). His father, a hard-drinking disciplinarian and journalist, died at the age of thirty-six from the consequences of excessive drinking when Frost was a child. His adult life was also marred by a long string of personal tragedies, such as in the loss of two of his six children in infancy and of his favorite child, his daughter, Marjorie, after delivering her first child. Only four years later, his wife, Elinor, suffered a sudden fatal heart attack, followed two years later by the suicide of his son, Carol. Still another child, Irma, had to be institutionalized for the same type of mental disorders as his sister, Jeannie, and Frost himself suffered lifelong bouts of clinical depression (Holman & Snyder, 2012). Frost proved unsuccessful as a farmer and tradesman but his writing was recognized as worthwhile while he was still in high school (Thompson, 1995).
Much of his work, including the dark poem A Witness Tree undoubtedly had their origins in the sadness Frost had experienced in connection with his many tragic losses. Frost nearly committed suicide as a very young man after the initial rejection...
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