Robert
Frost was born in San Francisco on March 26, 1874. He
moved to New England at the age of eleven and became interested in reading and
writing poetry during his high school years in Lawrence, Massachusetts. He was
enrolled at Dartmouth College in 1892, and later at Harvard, though he never
earned a formal degree.
Frost
drifted through a string of occupations after leaving school, working as a
teacher, cobbler, and editor of the Lawrence Sentinel. His first professional
poem, "My Butterfly," was published on November 8, 1894, in the New
York newspaper The Independent. In 1895, Frost married Elinor Miriam White, who
became a major inspiration in his poetry until her death in 1938. The
couple
moved to England in 1912, after their New Hampshire farm failed, and it was
abroad that Frost met and was influenced by such contemporary British poets as
Edward Thomas, Rupert Brooke, and Robert Graves. While in England, Frost also
established a friendship with the poet Ezra Pound, who helped to promote and
publish his work. By the time Frost returned to the United States in 1915, he
had published two full-length collections, A Boy's Will and North of Boston,
and his reputation was established. By the nineteen-twenties, he was the most
celebrated poet in America, and with each new book—including New Hampshire
(1923), A Further Range (1936), Steeple Bush (1947), and In the Clearing
(1962)—his fame and honors (including four Pulitzer Prizes) increased.
Though
his work is principally associated with the life and landscape of New England,
and though he was a poet of traditional verse forms and metrics who remained
steadfastly aloof from the poetic movements and fashions of his time, Frost is
anything but a merely regional or minor poet. The author of searching and often
dark meditations on universal themes, he is a quintessentially modern poet in
his adherence to language as it is actually spoken, in the psychological
complexity of his portraits, and in the degree to which his work is infused
with layers of ambiguity and irony.
In a 1970
review of The Poetry of Robert Frost, the poet Daniel Hoffman describes Frost's
early work as "the Puritan ethic turned astonishingly lyrical and enabled
to say out loud the sources of its own delight in the world," and comments
on Frost's career as The American Bard: "He became a national celebrity,
our nearly official Poet Laureate, and a great performer in the tradition of
that earlier master of the literary vernacular, Mark Twain." About Frost,
President John F. Kennedy said, "He has bequeathed his nation a body of
imperishable verse from which Americans
will forever gain joy and understanding." Robert Frost lived and taught
for many years in Massachusetts and Vermont, and died in Boston on January 29,
1963.
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