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His poems have diverse themes, rich contents, concise language, and wonderful poems show the sincere and touching lyrical style of his poems, the fresh and simple natural wind and the strong and passionate patriotic style, expressing the poet's cherishing of love and friendship, the fraternity of all things in nature, and the attachment to the mountains and rivers of the motherland.
Robert Burns.
Robert Burns (25 January 1759 – 21 July 1796) was a Scottish man.
The poet, considered the national poet of Scotland, is popular all over the world. Famous works include "Long Live Friendship".
Auld Lang Syne), Address to a Haggis, etc.
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Robert Frost (1874-1963) was one of the most beloved American poets, leaving behind many famous works such as "The Glade", "The Road Not Taken", and "A Little Stay by the Woods on a Snowy Night".
Opus. A few days ago, Robert Stilling, a graduate student in English literature at the University of Virginia, discovered an unpublished poem by Frost entitled "War Thoughts at Home." In a letter written in 1947, Frost mentioned the poem to a friend, Frederic Melcher, founder of the trade magazine Publishers Weekly.
In the letter, Frost stated that the poem was not published, but was hand-copied in a copy of North Boston, the second poem published by Frost. After reading the letter, Stilling began his search, eventually finding the book in the school library, and the poem that Frost copied from the book was published.
The poem was written in 1918 by Frost for the English poet Edward Thomas (1878-1917), who died on the battlefields of France.
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He wrote poetry collections "In the Mountains" (1916), "New Hampshire" (1923), Robert Frost, "The Stream to the West" (1928), "Another Pasture" (1936), "Glade" (1962), and the poetic dramas "The Mask of Reason" (1945) and "The Mask of Mercy" (1947). Web search.
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Biography of the Poet Robert Frost
Famous American poet. He was born in San Francisco on March 26, 1874, and died in Boston on January 29, 1963.
In 1885, Frost moved to New England with his mother, and after seven weeks at Dartmouth University, he became a pipemaker in a textile mill in Massachusetts because he didn't like the pedantic atmosphere of the school. Later, he studied at Harvard University for two years, and then began to work again — making shoes, country newspapers, teaching, and raising chickens. In 1912, he moved with his family to England, where he published a collection of poems, A Boy's Wish (1913) and North of Boston (1914), the latter of which catapulted him to fame.
He returned to the United States in 1915 and settled in New Hampshire, where he taught at Amherst University, Harvard University, and the University of Michigan, but never stopped writing.
Frost was a prolific poet who won the Pulitzer Prize four times and was awarded the Bollingen Prize posthumously. In addition to A Boy's Wish and North of Boston, he published collections of poems such as Between the Mountains (1916), New Hampshire (1923, Pulitzer Prize), The River That Goes West, Collected Poems (1930, Pulitzer Prize), Pastoral Fields Away (1936, Pulitzer Prize), The Witness Tree (1942, Pulitzer Prize), Meadowsweet (1947), and In the Empty (1962). He also wrote the poetic plays The Mask of Reason (1945) and The Mask of Mercy (1947).
Frost is extremely sensitive to natural beauty and human suffering, and the imagery of the poem is extremely rich. His poems are witty, humorous, and have a quintessential flavor of New England life. His usual poetic techniques are metaphors, sketches, and inner monologues.
His poetry is concise and concise, and his feelings are strong and sincere, but they are suppressed and very subtle. Frost is loved by readers for his many poems and unique style, and is known as a poet of nature, philosophy, and drama, and occupies an important place in American literature.
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