Many, if not most, of the best-known modern American poems were written by Robert Frost: “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” “The Road Not Taken,” “Fire and Ice,” “Dust of Snow,” “‘Out, Out—,’” “Birches,” to name a few. The pleasures of poetry, with its uncanny ability to plumb the well of experience (and sometimes even fathom its depths), has had few greater champions than this quiet, cunning American bard whose work, much like life itself, combines a welcoming directness with unexpected and sometimes treacherous turnings in its search for beauty, and for usable truths.
Frost is one of the strongest of American poets, showing the uniqueness and beauties of nature and humanity like few other poets can.
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