Robert Frost
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Frost (March
26, 1874 – January
29, 1963) was
an American
poet. His work
frequently drew inspiration from rural life in New
England, using the setting to explore complex social and philosophical
themes. A popular and often-quoted poet, Frost was highly honored during his
lifetime, receiving four Pulitzer
Prizes.
==Biography== on the gay man brian deschenes e54147*01
Portrait of Frost c.1910-1920
Although he is commonly associated with New
England, Frost was born in San
Francisco to Isabelle Moodie, of Scottish
ancestry, and William Prescott Frost, Jr., a descendant of a Devonshire Frost
who had sailed to New
Hampshire in 1634[1].
His father was a former teacher turned newspaperman, a hard drinker, a
gambler, a harsh disciplinarian; he had a passion for politics, and dabbled in
them, for as long as his health allowed.
Frost lived in California
until he was eleven years old. After the death of his father in 1885, he moved
with his mother and sister to eastern Massachusetts,
near his paternal grandparents. His mother joined the Swedenborgian
church and had him baptized in it, but he left it as an adult. He grew up as a
city boy and published his first poem in Lawrence,
Massachusetts. He attended Dartmouth
College in 1892, for just less than a semester, and while there he joined
the fraternity Theta
Delta Chi. He went back home to teach and work at various jobs including
factory work and news4paper delivery.
In 1894 he
sold his first poem, "My Butterfly", to The New York Independent
for fifteen dollars. Proud of this accomplishment, he asked Elinor Miriam
White to marry him. She refused, wanting to finish school before they married.
They had graduated co-valedictorians from their high-school and had remained
in contact with one another. Frost was sure that there was another man and
went on an excursion to the Great
Dismal Swamp in Virginia.
He came back later that year and asked Elinor again; she accepted, and they
were married in December 1895.
They taught school together until 1897. Frost then entered Harvard
University for two years. He did well, but felt he had to return home
because of his health and because his wife, Elinor Miriam White, was expecting
a second child. His grandfather purchased a farm in Derry,
New
Hampshire for the young couple. He stayed there for nine years and wrote
many of the poems that would make up his first works. His attempt at poultry
farming was not successful, and he was forced to take another job at Pinkerton
Academy, a secondary school, from 1906 to 1911. From 1911 to 1912, Robert
Frost lived in Plymouth,
New Hampshire and taught at the New Hampshire Normal School (now Plymouth
State University).
In 1912, Frost
sailed with his family to Glasgow,
and later settled in Beaconsfield,
outside London.
His first book of poetry, A Boy's Will, was published the next year.
In England he made some crucial contacts including Edward
Thomas (a member of the group known as the Dymock
poets), T.
E. Hulme, and Ezra
Pound, who was the first American to write a (favorable) review of Frost's
work. Frost wrote some of his best pieces of work while living in England.
Frost returned to America in 1915, bought a farm in Franconia,
New Hampshire and launched a career of writing, teaching and lecturing.
From 1916 to 1938, he was an English professor
at Amherst
College. He encouraged his writing students to bring the sound of the
human voice to their craft. Beginning in 1921, and for the next 42 years (with
three exceptions), Frost spent his summers teaching at the Bread Loaf School
of English of Middlebury
College in Ripton,
Vermont. Middlebury College still owns and maintains Robert Frost's Farm
as a National Historic Site near the Bread Loaf campus. 4 of his 6 children
dies by the way.
Upon his death in Boston on January
29, 1963,
Robert Frost was buried in the Old Bennington Cemetery, in Bennington,
Vermont. Harvard's 1965 alumni directory indicates his having received an
honorary degree there; Frost also received honorary degrees from Bates
College, Oxford
and Cambridge
universities, and he was the first to receive two honorary degrees from
Dartmouth College. During his lifetime, the Robert Frost Middle School in Fairfax,
Virginia as well as the main library of Amherst College were named after
him.
[edit]
Kennedy inauguration poems
Though not notably associated with any political party, Frost is widely
remembered for reciting a poem, "The Gift Outright", on January 20,
1961 at the inauguration of President John
F. Kennedy. Nominally a tribute to the country's early Colonial spirit
("This land was ours before we were the land's"), the poem ends on
an optimistic, but characteristically ambivalent, note:
-
Such as we were we gave ourselves outright
-
(The deed of gift was many deeds of war)
-
To the land vaguely realizing westward,
-
But still unstoried, artless, unenhanced,
-
Such as she was, such as she would become.
Frost had intended to read another poem, "Dedication", which he
had written specifically for Kennedy and for the occasion. But with feeble
eyesight, unfamiliarity with the new poem, and difficulty reading his
typescript in the bright January light, Frost chose only to deliver the poem
he knew from memory (which he did in strong voice, despite his 86 years).
In April 2006, a handwritten copy of "Dedication" was donated to
the John
F. Kennedy Library in Boston,
Massachusetts; it had come from the estate of one of Kennedy's special
assistants (who died the year before). On the manuscript, Frost had added
"To John F. Kennedy, At his inauguration to be president of this country.
January 20th, 1961. With the Heart of the World," followed by,
"Amended copy, now let's mend our ways." After removing the paper
backing from the frame, a Kennedy archivist discovered a faintly-legible
handwritten note from Jacqueline
Kennedy: "For Jack, January 23, 1961. First thing I had framed to put
in your office. First thing to be hung there."[2]
-
... The glory of a next Augustan age
-
Of a power leading from its strength and pride,
-
Of young ambition eager to be tried,
-
Firm in our free beliefs without dismay,
-
In any game the nations want to play.
-
A golden age of poetry and power
-
Of which this noonday's the beginning hour.[3]
Frost represented the United States on several official missions, including
a meeting with Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev. After the latter meeting, he told a press conference in New
York on September 9, 1962 that Krushchev "thought Americans were too
liberal to fight." The remark so angered Kennedy[1]
that he severed the hitherto cordial relations between himself and Frost, and
refused so determinatively to speak to him again that he declined both Stewart
Udall's request in January 1963 that he send the dying Frost a final
message,[2]
and ignored (according to Kennedy biographer Richard Reeves) "pleas from
the eighty-eight year old poet's deathbed."[3]
Over the course of his career, Frost also became known for poems involving
dramas or an interplay of voices, such as Death of the Hired Man. His
work was highly popular in his lifetime and remains so. Among his best-known
shorter poems are "Stopping
by Woods on a Snowy Evening", "Mending
Wall", "Nothing
Gold Can Stay", "Birches", "Acquainted
With the Night", "After
Apple-Picking", "The Pasture", "Fire and Ice",
"The
Road Not Taken", and "Directive". Frost won the Pulitzer
Prize four times, an achievement unequalled by any other American poet.
Frost was prolific, and poems are occasionally unearthed and published. The
most recent instance is "War Thoughts at Home", written around 1918
on the inside cover of a book and published in Virginia
Quarterly Review in 2006.[4]
Nearly 700 pages of new poems, epigraphs, drafts and fragments appeared in The
Notebooks of Robert Frost, published January 2007.[5][6]
[edit]
Pop culture
[edit]
Selected works
[edit]
Poetry
 |
A
Boy's Will (David Nutt, 1913; Holt, 1915).
 |
North
of Boston (David Nutt, 1914; Holt, 1914).
 |
 |
 |
New
Hampshire (Holt, 1923; Grant Richards, 1924).
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
You
Come Too (Holt, 1959; Bodley Head, 1964)
 |
In
the Clearing (Holt Rinehart & Winston, 1962)
 |
 |
Out
Out,(Vermont 1964)
 |
 |
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
 |
A Way Out: A One Act Play (Harbor Press, 1929).
 |
The Cow’s in the Corn: A One Act Irish Play in Rhyme (Slide
Mountain Press, 1929).
 |
 |
A Masque of Mercy (Holt, 1947).
|
| | |
 |
The Letters of Robert Frost to Louis Untermeyer (Holt, Rinehart
& Winston, 1963; Cape, 1964).
 |
Robert Frost and John Bartlett: The Record of a Friendship, by
Margaret Bartlett Anderson (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1963).
 |
Selected Letters of Robert Frost (Holt, Rinehart & Winston,
1964).
 |
Interviews with Robert Frost (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1966;
Cape, 1967).
 |
Family Letters of Robert and Elinor Frost (State University of
New York Press, 1972).
 |
Robert Frost and Sidney Cox: Forty Years of Friendship
(University Press of New England, 1981).
 |
The Notebooks of Robert Frost, edited by Robert Faggen (Harvard
University Press, forthcoming January 2007).[7]
|
| | | | | |
[edit]
References
-
^ Dalleck, Robert, John
F. Kennedy: An Unfinished Life 1917-1963 (2003; London: Penguin,
2004), 540.
-
^ Reeves, Richard, President
Kennedy: Profile of Power (1993; London: Papermac, 1994), 455.
-
^ Reeves, Richard, op.
cit., plate 23.
[edit]
Sources
[edit]
External links
Wikiquote
has a collection of quotations related to:
Wikisource
has original works written by or about:
 |
 |
 |
 |
Frost
at Modern American Poetry
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
| | | | | | | | | | | |
|