The Cambridge Companion to Robert FrostRobert Faggen Cambridge University Press, 2001-06-14 This collection of specially-commissioned essays by experts in the field explores key dimensions of Robert Frost's poetry and life. Frost remains one of the most memorable and beguiling of modern poets. Writing in the tradition of Virgil, Milton, and Wordsworth, he transformed pastoral and georgic poetry both in subject matter and form. Mastering the rhythms of ordinary speech, Frost made country life the point from which to view the world and the complexities of human psychology. The essays in this volume enable readers to explore Frost's art and thought, from the controversies of his biography to his subtle reinvention of poetic and metric traditions and the conflicts in his thought about politics, gender, science and religion. This volume will bring fresh perspectives to the lyric, narrative and dramatic poetry of an American master, and its chronology and guide to further reading will prove valuable to scholars and students alike. |
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... living the tale had growninextricably entwined. “Thetraditional version of the problematic of autobiography,” Paul JohnEakin observes in Fictions in Autobiography: Studies in the Artof SelfInvention, “has focused on the apparently ...
... living the tale had growninextricably entwined. “Thetraditional version of the problematic of autobiography,” Paul JohnEakin observes in Fictions in Autobiography: Studies in the Artof SelfInvention, “has focused on the apparently ...
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... Living in Salem Depot, NH, wherehismother had beenteaching in the district school since 1886, Frost, alongwith his sister Jeanie, commuted dailyto school by train, using passes purchased by W. P. Frost, Sr.The story of the Frost family ...
... Living in Salem Depot, NH, wherehismother had beenteaching in the district school since 1886, Frost, alongwith his sister Jeanie, commuted dailyto school by train, using passes purchased by W. P. Frost, Sr.The story of the Frost family ...
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... living first in a boardinghouse and later taking rooms in the home ofa localfarmer. Throughout his account, Thompson emphasizes Frost's bitter resentment that neither grandfather nor unclehad helped his mother securea post in Lawrence ...
... living first in a boardinghouse and later taking rooms in the home ofa localfarmer. Throughout his account, Thompson emphasizes Frost's bitter resentment that neither grandfather nor unclehad helped his mother securea post in Lawrence ...
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Turinys
Frost Biography and A Witness Tree | |
Frost andthe Questionsof Pastoral | |
Frost andthe Ancient Muses | |
Frost asaNew EnglandPoet LAWRENCE BUELL | |
Frosts Poetry of Metaphor JUDITH OSTER 8 Frost and the Meditative Lyric | |
Frosts Politics and theCold | |
Human Presence inFrosts Universe | |
Select bibliography | |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Amherst Amherst College andthe APNC atthe beauty become biographical birch birds Boy’s Cambridge Companion CPPP critics cultural dark Dionysus economic edited Edward Connery Emerson England English essay experience farm feminine figure flowers Frank Lentricchia fromthe Frost’s poems Frost’s poetry Grapes Hampshire Holt human iambic Ibid imagination inhis inthe isan itis Khrushchev language Lawrance Thompson Lawrence lines literary living Longfellow Louis Untermeyer lyrical Maenad man’s maple Mark Richardson masculine meaning Mending Wall metaphor meter metrical mill nature ofFrost’s ofhis ofthe one’s onthe Oven Bird parable pastoral Pentheus Plato’s poem’s poet poet’s poetic poetry reader rhyme rhythm Richard Poirier Robert Frost rose seems selfcontrol sense sentence snow social speaker speech spring stanza Steeple Bush suggests syllables T. S. Eliot thatthe thepoem thesame things thought tobe tone tothe tradition understand University Press verse Virgil withthe Witness Tree words writing York