Indifferent Earth: The Dual Faces of Nature in Robert Frost’s Poetry
Abstract
Man lives in close proximity to nature. So, man has been experiencing the amazing phenomena of nature. Nature comprises of different elements. Everything that occurs in nature including man himself except the things made by man is element of nature. The elements include rain, snow, wind, woods, trees, mountains, river, etc. It is not always true to say that nature is not vicious but benign to man. Sometimes it shows its cruelties to man making man's life difficult to survive. Then it is nature that gives shelter to man from its cruelties. Here, the important question is whether nature is man's enemy or friend? Does man aware of the duality of nature? So, it has becomes a pertinent fact to do a through research to know the interplay between man and nature. Robert Frost is a poet of nature and man. He successfully combines these two throughout his poetry. Frost has presented nature and where is man's place in nature in his poems. All of his poem are full of natural imagery. He understands nature and its elements well. In his poetry, he uses natural phenomena as background and moves toward making human beings and nature no longer exist as a separate entity. The paper focuses on studying man's reactions to the elements of nature in the poetry of Robert Frost. The paper will also study the unseen forces of nature hidden in the poetry of Frost.
Downloads
References
French, Roberts W. (1982). "Robert Frost and the Darkness of Nature." In Philip L. Gerber (Ed), CriCritical Essays on Robert Frost (pp. 155-162). Boston: G.K. Hall & Co.
Kendall, Tim. (2012). The Art of Robert Frost. Yale University Press.
Lowell, Amy. (1920). Tendencies in Modern American Poetry. Macmillan.
Lynen, John F. (1960). The Pastoral Art of Robert Frost. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Montgomery, M. (1962). "Robert Frost and His Use of Barriers: Man vs. Nature Toward God." In James M. Cox (Ed), Robert Frost: A Collection of Critical Essay (pp. 138-150). Prentice-Hall.
Oster, Judith. (1991). Towards Robert Frost the Reader and the Poet. The University of Georgia Press.
Robert Frost's Poems. 2002 St. Martin's Paperbacks.
Sohn, D. A. & Tyre, R. (1969). Frost, the Poet and His Poetry (Vol. 4368). Bantam Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 ISHAL PAITHRKAM

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.