ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
English III Videos 83 videos
AP English Literature and Composition 1.6 Passage Drill 5. Death is primarily characterized as what?
AP English Literature and Composition 1.4 Passage Drill 3. How is Burne's view of pacifism best characterized in lines 57 through 67?
ACT Reading Prose Fiction Drill 1, Problem 4. How does the narrator feel about the prediction made at his birth that he would have the ability...
Robert Frost 2800 Views
Share It!
Description:
Shmoop the road less traveled by.
Transcript
- 00:04
Robert Frost, a la Shmoop: Nature Boy. The next time you're in the grocery store. [girl rides shopping cart]
- 00:11
. . . . .try counting all the products that have the words "organic" or "natural" on them. [girl holds up a hot dog and sodas]
- 00:11
. . .try counting all the products that have the words "organic" or "natural" on them. [girl holds up a hot dog and sodas]
- 00:16
Oh, and you might want to wear comfortable shoes. . .
- 00:19
. . .since you're probably going to be there for awhile [woman in supermarket wearing fancy clothes]
Full Transcript
- 00:23
Yep. We're definitely on a back-to-nature phase. . .
- 00:26
. . .something our friend, Robert Frost, would have appreciated.
- 00:32
One of America's greatest poets. . .
- 00:34
. . . Frost wrote a lot of poems about nature and rural life. . .[Frost pops out of a poppy field]
- 00:37
. . .which leads us to our question. Why did he so often use nature as a theme?
- 00:42
Well, he did own a farm for ten years. . .
- 00:45
. . .so maybe living out in the country inspired him. . .
- 00:47
. . . to write about settings that were comfortable and familiar
- 00:51
Even after he sold the farm and moved to London. . . [map or world, boad crossing Atlantic]
- 00:54
. . .he may have looked at life in the country. . .
- 00:56
. . .as simpler and more "real" than urban life.
- 01:00
Or maybe he kept going back to nature. . .[Frost slides down snow on mountain]
- 01:02
. . .because of all the beautiful imagery it provided.
- 01:05
Poets love that stuff, right? Maybe Frost just liked painting pretty pictures
- 01:11
with words. . .
- 01:11
. . .and snow was just snow. . .
- 01:14
. . . and swaying birches were just swaying birches. [Frost with umbrella getting blown across screen]
- 01:18
Possibly. But what if he used nature as a metaphor for life?
- 01:24
Those woods don't sound quite as inviting now, do they?
- 01:28
You've got to admit, it's not too much of a
- 01:33
stretch. . .
- 01:33
. . .to think Frost might have used the harshness of nature. . .[guy bites into wormey apple]
- 01:37
. . .to point out how tough life could be. And he sure wouldn't have been the first writer.
- 01:42
. . .to use a metaphor. So, why did Frost write so often about nature? . .
- 01:43
. . .to use a metaphor. So, why did Frost write so often about nature?
- 01:48
Did he just feel more comfortable writing about rural settings. . .[Frost in a department store elevator]
- 01:53
. . .or did he think nature was a more worthy subject than urban life?
- 01:59
Was it all about creating visual imagery with words. . .
- 02:01
. . .or was nature a good stand-in for human struggles? [domestic pine trees with pine cone babies]
- 02:10
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...
Books become classics because they either reflect on or influence the world around us. As was the casewith Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. Of...
All Okonkwo was asking for was a little R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Granted, swinging your machete around may not be the nicest way to ask, but still. The guy d...
Entertainment that's also educational? We'll believe it when we read it, Shakespeare.