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Analysis Of The Poem ' Birches ' By Robert Frost

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Mother nature is one of the most important parts of Earth itself. Even though the majority of humans admire it’s beauty, people continue to kill and destroy not only nature, but also all components of Earth. Robert Frost features this idea through his poem “Birches.” Frost discusses this idea through a falsehood, for, at first glance the meaning of the poem is significantly different than the deeper meaning. Although “Birches” seems to be about a child frolicking through the trees, Frost’s “Birches” is actually about how people act cruelly towards nature and how they should change their ways to respect the earth, because the tenor, the form and vehicle, and critical interpretation.
Robert Frost’s experiences through his life drives him to write “Birches,” and later leads him to a successful career filled with many popular and well known poems. Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874, in San Francisco, California (Gerber). Frost’s parents are William Prescott Frost Jr. and and Isabelle Moodie Frost (Gerber). The Frost family consisted of Robert, his parents, and his sister Jeanie. Mr. Frost died in 1885 from tuberculosis, which created Mrs. Frost to take her children to Lawrence, Massachusetts, where they could live with their grandparents (Gerber). Robert and Jeanie proceeded to go to high school there, where he not only met Elinor White, his love, but he also fell as a top student in his class when he graduated in 1892 (Gerber). Not only did Robert fall in love with

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