A Flight of Stairs in “Home Burial”

Authors

  • Junli Zhang Beijing Union University
  • Xue Zhao Beijing Union University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1502.16

Keywords:

flight of stairs, “Home Burial”, failure of marriage

Abstract

Robert Frost is very good at using metaphors in his poems. The employment of metaphors endows his poems with rich emotions and thought, which is probably what Frost calls “emotion has found thought and thought has found words”. The loss of a child, in “Home Burial”, brings about the vastly different views of the husband and wife towards family, love, and children. The half-shut and half-open door is often taken as an example by scholars to symbolize the deadlock the couple is in. In fact, that flight of stairs is also symbolic of the separation and isolation of this couple. The setting of the poem is the staircase of the house, which will show how the position of the husband and wife in relation to the stairs influences their right of speech.

Author Biographies

Junli Zhang, Beijing Union University

English Language and Literature Department at Teachers’ College

Xue Zhao, Beijing Union University

English Language and Literature Department at Teachers’ College

References

Frost, R. (1995). Collected poems, prose, & plays. Library of America.

He, Q. J. (2010). Self and belief: A study of Robert Frost’s poetry. Science Publishing House.

Huang, Z. Y. (2011). A study of Robert Frost. Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.

Myers, N. B. (1969). Human relationships in the poetry of Robert Frost. North Texas State University.

Nitchie, G. W. (1960). Human values in the poetry of Robert Frost. Duke University Press.

Oster, J. (2004). Frost’s poetry of metaphor. In R. Faggen (Ed.), The Cambridge companion to Robert Frost (pp. 155-177). Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.

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Published

2025-02-01

Issue

Section

Articles