Belief and Uncertainty in the Poetry of Robert Frost

Belief and Uncertainty in the Poetry of Robert Frost

by Robert Pack
Belief and Uncertainty in the Poetry of Robert Frost

Belief and Uncertainty in the Poetry of Robert Frost

by Robert Pack

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Overview

Robert Pack’s lifelong delight in Robert Frost's intricate, beautiful, and profound poetry shines through in the essays in this book. He confronts such broad themes as mourning, inheritance, nature, and the imagination, bringing to bear historical, psychological, Darwinian, and close-textual-reading interpretive approaches. Chapter one sets Frost’s work in the tradition of nature writing, from the Book of Genesis through modern American ecological works. Chapter two examines the profound influences of the Book of Job, Darwin, and evolutionary theory on Frost’s thinking. There follow chapters that structurally and philosophically compare Wordsworth’s “Michael” to Frost’s “Wild Grapes,” focusing on the themes of inheritance, grieving, and the potency of the imagination. The reader encounters Frost as teacher and preacher, Frost’s idea of how beliefs are affirmed, the simultaneous representation of adult memory and immediate childhood sensation, and the underlying duality of place and nothingness, which forms the existential background for his “stay against confusion”—the consoling purpose of Frost's poetic art.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781584654568
Publisher: University Press of New England
Publication date: 12/07/2004
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Robert Pack is the Abernethy Professor of Literature and Creative Writing Emeritus at Middlebury College and Distinguished Senior Professor Emeritus of Humanities in the Honors College of the University of Montana, Missoula. He is the author of five prose works and nineteen previous books of poems, most recently Laughter before Sleep, also available from the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

Taking Dominion over the Wilderness • Darwin, the Book of Job, and Frost's A Masque of Reason • Loss and Inheritance in Wordsworth's "Michael" and Frost's "Wild Grapes" • Mourning and Acceptance • The Modern Muse: Stevens and Frost • Enigmatical Reserve: Robert Frost as Teacher and Preacher • Robert Frost's "As If" Belief • Self-Decpetion, Lying, and Fictive Truthfulness • Reading the Landscape: Place and Nothingness • Parenthood and Perspective • Index of Major Themes • Index of Authors, Works, and Literary Characters

What People are Saying About This

William H. Pritchard

"Robert Pack's book about Frost's poetry brings to it a lifetime experience of English and American verse. In addition to providing close readings of some of Frost's best poems, he puts them in challenging literary contexts: considering, for example, the idea of 'mourning' in 'Death of the Hired Man' and 'Home Burial' in relation to poems of Wordsworth, Blake, Hopkins, Dylan Thomas; or bringing out Frost's poetic distinctiveness by an extended comparison with that of Wallace Stevens. A wise, generous, and passionate account of how and why poetry matters."
William H. Pritchard, Amherst College

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