What are the characteristics of Frost's poems?
His poetry is similar to traditional poetry in form, but it is not as artificial as romantic and aesthetical poets. He does not pursue external beauty, and his poems often begin with describing the natural scenery or customs of New England and gradually enter the field of philosophy. His poems are unpretentious, but subtle and intriguing. Frost also wrote famous poems, such as Birch Tree and Mending the Wall. His poems are famous for describing natural scenery and rural life. In his early poems, he mostly took the most ordinary things in pasture and countryside as the theme, and explored the interest and artistic conception of poetry in the ordinary details of daily life. He doesn't use amazing language and peculiar poetic style, and neither sticks to the rules nor abandons them. He just used plain language like line drawing to show his faint sadness, humanitarian feelings and euphemistic sympathy for the workers. His poems use fresh words, use spoken language, have a strong flavor of life, and occasionally reveal the unique humor and sense of humor of an open-minded optimist.