: While contemporaries experimented with free verse, Frost preferred traditional structures, famously likening writing free verse to "playing tennis without a net". Notable Works
Frost’s work is characterized by a deceptive simplicity, often using traditional verse forms like blank verse and sonnets to explore deep philosophical themes such as isolation, choice, and humanity's relationship with a frequently indifferent nature. robert frost
Frost produced several poems that have become indelible parts of the American consciousness: : While contemporaries experimented with free verse, Frost
: Frost aimed to capture the natural rhythms and tones of everyday conversation within his poetry, a concept he called "the sound of sense". Frost preferred traditional structures
: In his essay "The Figure a Poem Makes," he famously stated that a poem "begins in delight and ends in wisdom".