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Frost, Robert 1874–1963: Critical Essay by Laurence Goldstein

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Gabriela Mistral
About 2 pages (636 words)
Robert Frost Summary

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Frost considered "Kitty Hawk" the most important of his later poems, and on speaking engagements around the country often cited this passage as a culminating statement of his natural philosophy. It is a buoyant endorsement of the via affirmativa, reminiscent in principle of Whitman's progressive ideal, though Frost's clipped verse line discourages comparison with the bard of the pioneers. (p. 42)

Though Frost, true to type, recommends that his public hasten in "getting thought expressed," he waited till the end of his career before writing the poem of Kitty Hawk. He tried once, in the 1930's, but after much whittling and revision, "The Wrights' Biplane" emerged as an undistinguished four line epigram. (p. 43)

This is a free excerpt of 113 words. There are 636 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Frost, Robert 1874–1963: Critical Essay by Laurence Goldstein from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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