Open Access
The Concept of “A Community of Shared Destiny” in Robert Frost’s Poems
Author(s) -
Na Zhang
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
bcp social sciences and humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2692-6172
DOI - 10.54691/bcpssh.v16i.474
Subject(s) - destiny (iss module) , poetry , frost (temperature) , natural (archaeology) , literature , new england , history , art , geography , archaeology , law , political science , engineering , meteorology , politics , aerospace engineering
Robert Frost was one of the most well-known poets in the United States. He used to live in the farm in New Hampshire. With familiarity with the natural scenery. Frost’s Poems were famous for the specific images in New England. However, his poems were rarely so plain as it appeared. Frost seemed likely to use the simple words to express the deep meanings. In his poems, the concept of “A community of Shared Destiny” was gradually but deeply implicated. The “community” included “Nature and Man”, “Animals and Man” “Man and Man” and so on.