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Robert Frost Biography

Born: March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California, USA


Died: January 29, 1963 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Birth Name: Robert Lee Frost

Robert Lee Frost, arguably the greatest American poet of the 20th century, was born in San
Francisco, California, on March 26, 1874. His father, William Prescott Frost Jr., was from a
Lawrence, Massachusetts, family of Republicans, and his mother, Isabelle Moodie Frost, was an
immigrant from Scotland. His father was a journalist who dabbled in politics, was rebellious and
named his son after the Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. William Frost was also an alcoholic and
tubercular.

William met his wife while teaching school in Pennsylvania. Their marriage was not a happy one
due to a dissimilarity of temperament. He succumbed to tuberculosis in 1885, and Isabelle
honored her husband's wish he be buried in his native Massachusetts. With Robert and her
daughter Jeanie, they relocated to Lawrence, near his father's parents.

Isabelle became a schoolteacher in Salem, New Hampshire, just over the state line, close to
Lawrence. Robert and Jeanie became two of her pupils. Robert attended Lawrence High School,
where his first poems were published in the school's bulletin. Upon graduation in 1892, he shared
valedictorian honors with Elinor White, to whom he became engaged later that year.

Frost entered Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, in September 1892, but left after
one semester. This caused a conflict with Elinor, who wanted him to finish college and refused to
marry him until he did so. In his late teens and early 20s he worked at various occupations,
including mill hand, newspaper reporter and teacher in his mother's school.
His first published poem, "My Butterfly: An Elegy", appeared in the New York magazine "The
Independent" in 1894, and he eventually self-published a book of poems. He and Elinor were
married on December 19, 1895. Their first child, a son they named Elliott, was born on
September 29, 1896. Robert was accepted at Harvard as a special student, but had to drop out
due to tuberculosis and the birth of the couple's second child in 1899. He never finished his
college education.

As the new century dawned, the Frost family was afflicted with the first of the tragedies that
would dog them all of their lives. Elliott contracted cholera and died in July of 1900, at age four,
a development that rocked the Frost marriage (Frost later addressed the event in his poem "Home
Burial"). Frost's mother died that year from cancer, and his grandfather, William Prescott Frost
Sr., passed away in 1901. His grandfather left him an annual annuity of $500 and the use of his
Derry, New Hampshire, and farm for ten years, after which ownership would pass to Robert.

The Frosts had four more children; their last, a daughter born in 1907, died after three days.
Although Frost longed to be a poet since he was a youth, recognition of his talent would prove
elusive. To support himself he had to work the farm and supplemented his income by teaching
school, often in partnership with his wife. He tried to make a go as a poultry farmer, but he was
not successful. Economic necessity forced him to spend the 1910-11 school year teaching at the
State Normal School in far-off Plymouth, New Hampshire.

Frost practiced education by poetry with his children, since to him the two were one and the
same. Poetry thus became part of the everyday life of the Frost family. His daughters Lesley,
Irma, Marjorie and son Carol were home-schooled by their parents. Along with the basic
instruction, they were encouraged to develop their powers of observation and cultivate their
imaginations. Reading and writing were intended to be both pleasurable and a vehicle of
discovery.

Frost shared his stories and poems with his children and they, in turn, were encouraged to write
and share their stories and poems with their parents. The Frost children published their own little
magazine, "The Bouquet", with their English friends while their family was living in England.
The family had moved there in August 1912 because no American publisher was interested in his
poems and he was feeling isolated. After coming into possession of the Derry farm in 1911, he
sold it to raise the funds to finance the move. The relocation proved fortunate, as he quickly
made friends and, for the first time in his life, was a member in good standing of a group of
serious poets.
Living on a farm in Buckinghamshire with his family, Frost became a prolific writer as he went
about finding his own, distinct poetic voice. Through an acquaintance, he met fellow American
exile 'Ezra Pound', the great avant-garde poet who would prove to be a supporter of his.

Just two months after his arrival in England, the small London publisher David Nutt accepted his
submission of a collection of poems primarily consisting of the work he had done over the
previous nine years. "A Boy's Will" was published in 1913, and received good reviews from the
English press despite being a young man's work. Frost then relocated to Gloucestershire,
England, to be closer to the group of poets known as The Georgians. The second collection, his
seminal "North of Boston", was published in 1914. The volume contained his classic poems
"Mending Wall", "The Death of the Hired Man" and "After Apple-Picking", which have been
frequently anthologized. Frost, as a poet, had not only arrived, but he had matured as an artist.

After the publication of "North of Boston", Frost moved his family back to the US due to
England's involvement in World War One. By the time of his return, publisher Henry Holt had
published "North of Boston" to great success. Frost was a shrewd promoter of himself as a poet,
and he became celebrated by the literary establishments of Boston and New York. Holt, who
would be his publisher throughout his life, brought out his third volume, "Mountain Interval", in
1916. The book, containing poems he had written in England and in his nine-year exile as a
farmer-teacher, solidified his reputation. The collection included "The Road Not Taken", "An
Old Man's Winter Night", "The Oven Bird" and "Birches".

Once again settling in the New England he would forever be associated with, Frost bought a
farm at Franconia, New Hampshire. In 1917 he took a position at Amherst College as professor
of literature and poet-in-residence. By the 1920s he was acknowledged as one of America's most
important poets. Frost won the Pulitzer Prize in 1924 for his fourth book of verse, "New
Hampshire". He published new and collected volumes of poetry at fairly regular intervals,
assumed teaching appointments at Dartmouth, Harvard and the University of Michigan, and
maintained a busy schedule of lectures and poetry readings. His honors, which included a record
four Pulitzer Prizes, were matched by his popularity. He was the only poet ever chosen as a
selection of The Book of the Month Club, and his books of poetry were sold in mass-market
editions.

Frost has been frequently but erroneously mentioned as a Nobel laureate, but he never won the
prize. As he became a leading literary lion in America, he became more influential, and was a
favorite of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Frost successfully lobbied Ike to have Ezra Pound,
incarcerated in a madhouse since being arrested for his treasonous radio broadcasts from fascist
Italy during World War II, released and returned to private life.
One of the most famous moments in American history came at the inauguration of President
John F. Kennedy, a fellow New Englander, on January 20, 1961, when Frost read a poem. He
was the first poet ever to read at an American inauguration, and the event testified to both his
greatness as a serious poet and his popular appeal. He represented the United States on official
foreign missions during both the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations. The U.S. Congress
voted Frost a Congressional Gold Medal in 1962, presented to him by President Kennedy at a
public ceremony. Kennedy sent Frost as a cultural emissary to the USSR at the height of the
Cold War in 1962, not long before his death.

Towards the end of his life he had achieved a popular acclaim unique for an American poet,
though his critical reputation had declined due to a diminution of his powers. "A Witness Tree",
his last truly significant book of verse, was published in 1942. His final three collections of
poetry were not as praised as his older poetry had been, though certain pieces were
acknowledged as among his best.

When Frost died in a Boston hospital on January 29, 1963, two months shy of his 89th birthday,
he was the most widely respected man of American letters. Since his death his reputation has not
diminished, the mark of a great artist. In 1996 three poets who won the Nobel Prize for literature,
Joseph Brodsky, Seamus Heaney and Derek Walcott jointly published an homage to the
influence of Frost, whom they feel is one of literature's greatest poets.

Trivia (6)
Received four Pulitzer Prizes for volumes of poetry -- 1924, 1931, 1937, 1943.
Recited his celebrated poem, The Gift Outright, at John F. Kennedy's presidential inauguration in
1961. He had planned to also read a dedicatory preface to the poem but couldn't read the text in
that afternoon's bright sunlight.
Pictured on a 10 US commemorative postage stamp issued on the 100th anniversary of his
birth, March 23, 1974.
Was the 1959 recipient of the prestigious Connor Award given by the brothers of the Phi Alpha
Tau fraternity based out of Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts. He is also an honorary
brother of the fraternity.
Used his influence with the Eisenhower Administration to get the poet Ezra Pound, who had
been arrested for treason for making radio broadcasts for Mussolini during World War II,
released from the mental ward of St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington, D.C. in 1958. Pound
was declared mentally unfit to stand trial for treason in 1946, and had been committed to St.
Elizabeth's.
Member of the Theta Delta Chi Fraternity. He was initiated at the Dartmouth Charge.

Robert Lee Frost created a total of 180 and a half, one incomplete and unpublished
The following are amongst the top 5 poems written by Robert Frost

#1 The Road Not Taken


Poetry Collection: Mountain Interval
Published: 1916
Robert Frost was close friends with British poet Edward Thomas and the two took many walks
together. In Frosts words, Thomas was a person who, whichever road he went, would be sorry
he didnt go the other. The Road Not Taken was initially meant to be a gentle mocking of
indecision and Frost sent an advanced copy of the poem to Thomas. In the poem, the speaker
stands in the woods pondering which of the two roads ahead should he take. Though Frost
probably wrote the poem to highlight the human tendency to look back and blame minor
decisions in their life, it has since been interpreted by readers as a poem on the benefit of free
thinking and not following the crowd. The last lines of the poem are hugely popular and often
quoted. The Road Not Taken is not only the most famous poem of Robert Frost but among the
most renowned ever written.

Excerpt:-
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

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