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Frost’s “home Burial”

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Frost’s “home Burial”

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In the poem, the staircase provides a backdrop to the scene of emotional frustration. The poem begins with the wife, Amy on top of the stairs, and the husband at the bottom which indicates the emotional gap existing between. “He saw her from the bottom of the stairs, before she saw him.” She was about to go down, but something stopped her and she remained on top and looked out of the window once again. It was the husband who took the first step towards her, indicating h...

"Home Burial" may not be as popular as "Mending Wall" and "The Death of the Hired Man," but it is Frost's most critically acclaimed and intensively analyzed narrative. Again, Frost deals with barriers between people -- in this case a husband and wife who have recently lost their first child and who handle their grief in strikingly different ways -- according to their characters and expressive capabilities. The locale is a New England farm with a family burial plot in the yard, illustrating familiarity with death,

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