Robert Frost's writings are so many individuals and instilled such a dynamic impact on American culture; he called the "poet America." Robert Frost is a famous American poet often associated with beautiful scenes from the New England area. But the deeper meaning of his poems about everything, and so their readers, many critics use words such as loneliness, anxiety and frustration with some of the famous Frost poem to describe them.
The poetry of Robert Frost often covers the topics of nature. “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” and “birches” are both two of those poems. Frost shows the relationship between man and nature in both poems. In the poem Birches, the poet sees the trees whose branches are bent by snowstorms. However, he supports the view of branches that are bent because of the kids hanging and swinging on them, as he did, when he was young. Here, he connects people with nature. Frost also gives a good description of the branches, because they fall themselves, as the wind increases (lines 7-8). This variation on the idea that the problems and experiences, click outside people, but not very easy to understand that the problems people have broken. Frost also explains the branches bending due to snow but do not break. This can also be compared to life, because many people have trouble and disappointment.
The poem “Birches” is an example of using images of nature to express contempt for the pressure of public life. Much of the language used in Birches is permeated with words that indicate the burden. Often they were loaded with ice. “A lot of broken glass for revenge,
They dragged him to the dry fern to load, but once they are bowed so low for long,