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  1. Jun 26, 2020 · In 1947, his daughter, Irma was committed to a mental hospital. Elinor, Robert Frost’s wife, suffered from depression as well. ... he focused in a section on Frost’s life surrounding the death ...

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  2. Mar 26, 2017 · Cone’s mother, Irma — Robert Frost’s daughter — was schizophrenic. When she got older, Frost committed her to a mental hospital. The illness impacted other members of the family as well ...

  3. Verse and Adverse. The letters of Robert Frost invite us to reconsider the man behind the poetry. Danny Heitman. HUMANITIES, May/June 2014, Volume 35, Number 3. Photo caption. By the time Robert Frost died in 1963 at the age of eighty-eight, he was not only a poet but a public institution, his presence as familiar to his fellow Americans as the ...

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  5. Mar 16, 2017 · Others say there’s a darker Frost that you can see in his poetry.” John Cone and Hart spent time discussing schizophrenia and its impact on the Frost family. Cone’s mother, Irma — Robert Frost’s daughter — was schizophrenic. When she got older, Frost committed her to a mental hospital.

    • Who Was Robert Frost?
    • Early Years
    • Wife
    • Children
    • Early Poetry
    • Public Recognition For Frost’s Poetry
    • Famous Poems
    • Pulitzer Prizes and Awards
    • President John F. Kennedy’s Inauguration
    • Soviet Union Tour

    Robert Frost was an American poet and winner of four Pulitzer Prizes. Famous works include “Fire and Ice,” “Mending Wall,” “Birches,” “Out Out,” “Nothing Gold Can Stay” and “Home Burial.” His 1916 poem, "The Road Not Taken," is often read at graduation ceremonies across the United States. As a special guest at President John F. Kennedy’s inaugurati...

    Frost was born on March 26, 1874, in San Francisco, California. He spent the first 11 years of his life there, until his journalist father, William Prescott Frost Jr., died of tuberculosis. Following his father's passing, Frost moved with his mother and sister, Jeanie, to the town of Lawrence, Massachusetts. They moved in with his grandparents, and...

    Frost met his future love and wife, Elinor White, when they were both attending Lawrence High School. She was his co-valedictorian when they graduated in 1892. In 1894, Frost proposed to White, who was attending St. Lawrence University, but she turned him down because she first wanted to finish school. Frost then decided to leave on a trip to Virgi...

    Frost and White had six children together. Their first child, Elliot, was born in 1896. Daughter Lesley was born in 1899. Elliot died of cholera in 1900. After his death, Elinor gave birth to four more children: son Carol (1902), who would commit suicide in 1940; Irma (1903), who later developed mental illness; Marjorie (1905), who died in her late...

    In 1894, Frost had his first poem, "My Butterfly: an Elegy," published in The Independent, a weekly literary journal based in New York City. Two poems, "The Tuft of Flowers" and "The Trial by Existence," were published in 1906. He could not find any publishers who were willing to underwrite his other poems. In 1912, Frost and Elinor decided to sell...

    When Frost arrived back in America, his reputation had preceded him, and he was well-received by the literary world. His new publisher, Henry Holt, who would remain with him for the rest of his life, had purchased all of the copies of North of Boston. In 1916, he published Frost's Mountain Interval, a collection of other works that he created while...

    Some of Frost’s most well-known poems include: 1. “The Road Not Taken” 2. “Birches” 3. “Fire and Ice” 4. “Mending Wall” 5. “Home Burial” 6. “The Death of the Hired Man” 7. “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening” 8. “Acquainted with the Night” 9. “Out, Out” 10. “Nothing Gold Can Stay”

    During his lifetime, Frost received more than 40 honorary degrees. In 1924, Frost was awarded his first of four Pulitzer Prizes, for his book New Hampshire. He would subsequently win Pulitzers for Collected Poems (1931), A Further Range (1937) and A Witness Tree(1943). In 1960, Congress awarded Frost the Congressional Gold Medal.

    At the age of 86, Frost was honored when asked to write and recite a poem for President John F. Kennedy's 1961 inauguration. His sight now failing, he was not able to see the words in the sunlight and substituted the reading of one of his poems, "The Gift Outright," which he had committed to memory.

    In 1962, Frost visited the Soviet Union on a goodwill tour. However, when he accidentally misrepresented a statement made by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchevfollowing their meeting, he unwittingly undid much of the good intended by his visit.

  6. Nov 18, 2020 · Robert Frost lived by his quote. He went on and kept living life despite his tragedy and loss. He found a reason to keep on living. And while many read his poems as inspirational nature poems ...

  7. Dec 16, 2021 · Frost at Midnight. A new, beautifully edited volume of Robert Frost’s letters finds him at the height of his artistic powers while suffering a series of losses almost unimaginable to the fortunate among us. On April 29, 1934, Robert Frost wrote to his friend Louis Untermeyer that his “favorite poem long before I knew what it was going to ...

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