From the Book - Regular Print
Frost's enigmatical reserve / Robert Pack
The redemptive imagination / Frank Lentricchia
Choices / Richard Poirier
Robert Frost's New Testament / Marie Borroff
From sublime to rigamarole / Sydney Lea
Wordsworth, Frost, Stevens, and the poetic vocation / David Bromwich
The counter-intelligence of Robert Frost / Herbert Marks
Echoing Eden / Charles Berger.
From the Book - Regular Print
Biography of Robert Frost
Thematic analysis of "The death of the hired man" (including a discussion of "Mending wall")
Critical views on "The death of the hired man." Ezra Pound on North of Boston's reception ; Amy Lowell on North of Boston and its portrait of New England ; Denis Donoghue on Frost and social Darwinism ; Frank Lentricchia on "Mending wall" in relation to other poems in North of Boston ; Richard Poirier on home in "The death of the hired man" ; Katherine Kearns on gender and empathy in "The death of the hired man"
Thematic analysis of "The oven bird" and "Birches" (including a discussion of "The road not taken")
Critical views on "The oven bird" and "Birches." Peter Viereck compares Frost to other modernist poets ; Yvor Winters on Frost as a romantic poet ; John F. Lynen on pastoralism and Frost as a nature poet ; Robert Pack on poetic acts of naming and belief ; James Ellis on representations of sexual growth in "Birches" ; Matthew Parfitt on Frost's modern Georgics ; H.A. Maxson on the oven bird as a figure for the poet
Thematic analysis of "Design" (including a discussion of "Fire and ice")
Critical views on "Design." Randall Jarrell on Frost's darker side ; Lionel Trilling on Frost as a "terrifying poet" ; Mordecai Marcus on natural evil and the argument from "Design" ; George F. Bagby on Frost and the book of nature ; Edward J. Ingebretsen on religious terror in "Design" ; Joseph Brodsky on nature as a self-portrait
Thematic analysis of "Directive" (including a discussion of "Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening")
Critical views on "Directive." Robert Frost on "The figure a poem makes" ; W.H. Auden on landscape, ruin, and poetic temperament ; Marie Borroff on the New Testament allusion in "Directive" ; Sydney Lea on Frost's relation to Wordsworth ; Herbert Marks on the poem as parable ; Charles Berger on returning to origins.