Social and philosophic aspects of Robert Frost s poetry , called them the pivot of all his poetry . Nature was first seen in Frost s first poem of his first book. , The main questions of life seem to arise from the sense of nature. They widen the observation of natural (a forest, a brook, stones, flowers, birds, stars, snow) and semi- natural objects (neglected houses, decaying firewood and other things that people returned to nature ). These objects themselves take at least three linked meanings: a symbol of the idea associatively correlated with this object, the mirror of soul and the object itself. The fifth peculiarity is that the unknown is present in nearly all well-known Frost s poems. For instance, in West-Running Brook something < span align = "justify"> is the central subject of the character s reasoning, and For Once, Then Something turns out to be the declaration of realistic agnosticism. This poem illustrates Democritus thought that truth is at the bottom of the well . When the character looks into the well he sees his own godlike reflection against a background of reflected sky. After choosing another point of view the character looks under the surface of water. He manages to see Truth? A pebble of quartz? For once, then, something at the bottom of the well just for a moment. But then the water drops immediately fall from the walls of this well on its surface and make the water cloudy, so he doesn t manage to look on something carefully. The truth is independent of a man in this case. It may be equal to a pebble of quartz , but principally unknowledgeable, because nature itself stands in the way of its cognition.
... Gives me back in a shining surface picturemyself in the summer heaven godlike ...
... I discerned, as I thought, beyond the picture, the picture, a something white,...