1 Content Introduction


practical significance of this work



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Robert Frost.

practical significance of this work is the study of Frost's style of writing, the style 
of the poet of the American people. Frost was neither a drunk nor a drug addict, he 
did not change mistresses and did not make high-profile scandals, which is usually 
expected from famous poets. His life, at first glance, was uneventful, measured
even boring. But there was also love in it, and numerous dramas in his family (the 
death in infancy of his two children, the mental illness of his sister, the early death 
of his wife, the suicide of his son), and serious illnesses and depressions. Frost 



experienced all this alone with the beautiful East American nature, allowing what 
he experienced in his poems only in the form of deaf allusions. 
The object of study of this course work is the spirit of the American 
common people, its culture, expressed by the poet with the help of certain stylistic 
devices. 
The literary tropes themselves become the subject of study, and there are 
a great many of them in the works of the American writer. Although it can 
sometimes be difficult to identify one or another stylistic turn, but considering all 
of Frost's work as a whole, according to the overall picture, much is revealed to the 
reader's eyes. 
Frost's external publicity , combined with internal closeness, gave rise to 
false stereotypes about him, which are still partly alive. 
Frost is called the "poet of the countryside" . But the idea of Frost as a singer 
of nature and the joys of simple rural life is completely wrong . Frost does not sing 
of nature, as a city dweller might; Frost knows her too well for that . Frost is 
deeply attached to nature, he sees its beauty and strength, but never forgets that 
nature is sometimes hostile, and more often indifferent to man. Nature can be a 
mirror for a person, but the mirror does not save from loneliness. In Frost's poetry, 
man and nature act in parallel, they are directly interconnected. The poet showed 
that the only and main difference between man and nature is that man is a finite, 
mortal being, and nature is experiencing an uninterrupted cycle of being (“Home 
Cemetery”, “Death of a Laborer”, “Love and Mystery.”) 

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