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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines how and why Robert Frost is a terrifying poet as seen in his poems Design and Niether Out Far Nor in Deep. No additional sources cited.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RArrry.rtf
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stated that he thought Robert Frost was a "terrifying poet." Most people of the time considered Frost a wonderful, not terrifying, poet. The following paper examines how and why Frost
could be seen as a terrifying poet through his poems Design and Neither Out Far Nor in Deep. Robert Frost: Terrifying Poet For the most part, when speaking
of nature and the manner in which Frost presents his own perspective of nature, the poem Design is a wonderfully beautiful poem that can make a person rise above a
disgust of things like spiders. But, in all honesty there are many images that speak of simple terrifying realities. The very first
line of the poem can send shivers down a persons spine as Frost writes simply and realistically of "a dimpled spider, fat and white" (Frost 1). Because it is a
spider, not something else that would be pleasant if it were dimpled, fat, and white (such as a peeled potato) this image is possibly quite terrifying. And his calm tone
in presenting this image, and images throughout the poem, can be very terrifying. Frost states how "Assorted characters of death and blight/ Mixed ready to begin the morning right"
(4-5). This sounds like a childrens rhyme and as such would seem pleasant but the imagery is of blight, and death and then it presents such images as though they
are what make life, the morning, right and correct. One could well envision a sense of insanity when trying to find anything but the terrifying in such a pattern of
rhyme and imagery. One could even envision a mind similar to that of Edgar Allen Poe, although far more subtle and subversive in getting this terrifying image across. In
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