Frost …show more content…
The poems though different in context and poetic allusion they seem to be interlinked by common thematic concerns. For example, the primary theme in most of his writings is that of despair and death. In some of his poems such as “A Soldier”, “In a Disused Graveyard”, “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, “Home Burial”, and “The Pasture” he has referred to death and despair in one form or another. He refers to death in “A Soldier” by the comparison of a soldier to a fallen Lance lying on the ground where it was thrown left to rust and waste away similar to a soldier’s body on the battlefield. In addition, in “A Disused Graveyard” Frost has used personification to humanize the gravestones that anticipate more dead to come.
A second theme is youth and loss of innocence. Frost imagines youth as a time of unbound freedom that is taken for granted and then lost. The poems “Birches”, “Acquainted with the Night”, “Desert Places”, and “A boundless moment” address the realities of aging and loss contrasting the carefree pleasures of youth yet to experience the harsh realities of adult experiences. Moreover, “A Boys Will” explores this theme as …show more content…
Frost explored writing styles from symbolism to metaphors to personification to convey his messages and themes. The literary movements (Modernism) that Frost engaged in included joining Ernest Hemingway, and Eliot T.S to champion for the release of Ezra Pound who had been held for treason and later released in1958. Frost also received a congressional Gold medal for his announcement in Russia that America was “too liberal to engage in