Robert Frost Documentary - 1963

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 93

  • @severito33
    @severito33 3 года назад +15

    Good times when great artists were followed, respected and admired.

  • @anneholz3376
    @anneholz3376 5 лет назад +20

    I absolutely love him. The finest American poet that ever lived. A wonderful human being.

  • @noreenmary3300
    @noreenmary3300 3 года назад +12

    The Road Not Taken. One of my favorite poems. ❤️

  • @dasfernandez1089
    @dasfernandez1089 4 месяца назад +3

    'The Woods are lovely
    Dark and deep
    But I have promises to keep
    And miles to go before I sleep
    And miles to go before I sleep.'
    Very few lines from américain poetry can match this poetic wisdom from Robert Frost...!

  • @susanm.jeavons
    @susanm.jeavons 6 месяцев назад +1

    I just adore him and his poetry. The only poem of his I can recite is "Whose Woods These Are." I learned it in elementary school and never forgot it. Now I have dementia but I can remember that. ❤

  • @gavinn.4060
    @gavinn.4060 5 лет назад +19

    theres something very calming about his voice

  • @vicentepineda1860
    @vicentepineda1860 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for posting this very interesting view of Mr. Frost's life.

    • @vicentepineda1860
      @vicentepineda1860 5 месяцев назад

      Thank you. Those who love poetry will always find Mr. Frost's words very inspiring.

  • @glenncomo3234
    @glenncomo3234 8 лет назад +22

    He was a genius. How fortunate we are that he gave us his gift.

    • @rtothes936
      @rtothes936 4 года назад +1

      So much a gem for all to enjoy or notice the best of all modern poets.

    • @thetruth4654
      @thetruth4654 3 года назад

      @@rtothes936 I think that would be W.B Yeats, but i think Frost would be the second best

  • @sattarabus
    @sattarabus 4 года назад +13

    Frost's vision of the world was leavened by what he had observed and experienced as an individual. He could crack a joke and deprecate heaps of knowledge piled like old rags in a disused barn primarily because he knew that education based on books about books led to erudition that spawns erudition with no expiry.
    His poems are light like moths and butterflies. His diction lightsome. That makes him one of the easiest poets to learn by heart.
    Nature's first green is gold
    her hardest hue to hold.
    Her early leaf is a flower
    but only so an hour.
    Then leaf subsides to leaf
    So Eden sank to grief
    So dawn goes down to day--
    Nothing gold can stay. Robert Frost

    • @codykimmel
      @codykimmel 2 года назад +1

      What a beautiful snapshot of Frost's essence.

  • @scarlettohara8593
    @scarlettohara8593 7 лет назад +14

    Frost: The Beauty of Simplicity! Frost had a wonderful sense of humor.

  • @lloydsavage1520
    @lloydsavage1520 2 года назад +1

    Very good Robert this poet enjoyed your talk.

  • @TTraveller3
    @TTraveller3 5 месяцев назад

    Wonderful poet…. Such a deep thinker…. a clear thinker…. Such a clever user of words…. Clear and concise…. “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one less traveled by,
    And that has made all the difference….” RIP 🌺🌺🌺🌺

  • @08CARIB
    @08CARIB 7 лет назад +10

    He is very different than I expected, I appreciate this film

  • @alonespirit_1Q84
    @alonespirit_1Q84 3 года назад +3

    The poet who ended all his poems with wisdom 🍁

  • @MMW1531
    @MMW1531 5 лет назад +6

    It’s a pleasure to meet you here. What you did was no mean feat. “The road not taken“ guided me to your world. Thank you.

  • @qwertytray
    @qwertytray 3 года назад +3

    This is great

  • @abelizandro3811
    @abelizandro3811 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing this jewel

  • @theirishroses
    @theirishroses 4 года назад +2

    Also a cousin to Mr. frost on my mothers side
    enjoyed this tape. much to learn from his poems and thoughts

  • @emmarose4234
    @emmarose4234 5 лет назад +5

    My favorite Robert Frost poem is Good Hours. ☺️

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 Год назад

    Appreciate this

  • @ronaldcrenfro4637
    @ronaldcrenfro4637 3 года назад

    ADMIRED BY MILLIONS He gave us Words we needed to hear say and speak

  • @TBBMusicBlog
    @TBBMusicBlog 8 лет назад +4

    Beautiful!

  • @donaldfarmer8421
    @donaldfarmer8421 2 года назад +3

    Nature's first green is gold
    Her hardest Hue to hold
    Her early Leafs a flower
    But only so an hour
    Then Leaf subsides to leaf
    So Eden came to grief
    So Dawn goes down to day
    Nothing Gold Can Stay
    Robert Frost

  • @anumafroz3596
    @anumafroz3596 7 лет назад +5

    My Mother adores him daily...

  • @jm7804
    @jm7804 2 года назад +3

    He was exceptionally handsome as a young man....and tremendously talented for his entire life.

  • @anumafroz3596
    @anumafroz3596 7 лет назад +8

    He is little older for his age...even at birth...great American poet who did so much for English poetry that only a German could have done in French...

    • @nickandmikec
      @nickandmikec 6 лет назад +4

      Frost was often misunderstood, meaning his work was. Eliot insisted one must know the whole tradition before even beginning to write poetry. Frost said one must begin on insufficient means; he also said once that Eliot and Pound studied bric-a-brac, which I assumed was a remark about their use of allusions rather than their work being self-contained. All of my favorite poets rarely alluded to other poems or literature. Eliot was wrong. Frost was right. One must begin on insufficient means. One can be a poet and write exclusively about his or her own experiences. One must work hard but doesn't have to know it all before he or she begins. Frost was right.

    • @panjandrum.conundrum
      @panjandrum.conundrum 4 года назад

      working from insufficiency is analogous perhaps to Keats' "negative capability" and to Stevens' "poem of the mind in the act of finding what will suffice," a modest but realistic ideal with its own resonance

  • @GlamorousTitanic21
    @GlamorousTitanic21 6 лет назад +21

    I’m a distant relative of his on my mother’s side.

    • @abidaziz8179
      @abidaziz8179 3 года назад

      Ive been writing for almost two decades now, Robert Frost was such an inspiration for me. As a refugee displaced from my homeland at an early age, his lovers quarell with the world has been all too familiar.

  • @yacovmitchenko1490
    @yacovmitchenko1490 24 дня назад

    While a few of his poems are both popular and great, it would be fair to say that on the whole what made him great was not really what made him popular. Kennedy himself suggested something similar at the beginning of the documentary. Here are the poems I consider to be his best:
    1. Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening
    2. Acquainted With the Night
    3. The Most of It
    4. Design
    5. Desert Places
    6. Neither Far Out Nor in Deep
    7. Never Would Birds' Song Be the Same
    8. Home Burial
    9. The Road Not Taken
    10. A Servant to Servants
    11. The Wood Pile
    12. After Apple Picking
    He wrote other (arguably) great poems, but he was first and foremost a master of rhyme. His finest poems are mostly brief lyrics.

  • @rtothes936
    @rtothes936 4 года назад +3

    Me for the woods.

  • @JCPJCPJCP
    @JCPJCPJCP Год назад +1

    I thought Jay Parini's biography
    "ROBERT FROST/a life, 1999, was excellent when I read it back in 2004. Professor Parini seems to be a Frost scholar, an expert.
    He admires Frost openly, but is critical of him, too.
    Edit: Parini's appearance on C-SPAN'S
    "Booknotes," discussing his bio of Frost, is very impressive, too.
    The professor's mind overflows with all he knows about the poet.

    • @Allen1029
      @Allen1029 Год назад

      You might like this: ruclips.net/video/IN3PFm0rMwE/видео.html

    • @JCPJCPJCP
      @JCPJCPJCP Год назад

      I thought Gore's memoirs, "Palimpsest," 1995, and "Point to Point Navigation," 2007, were so interesting and enjoyable that I read both of them twice.
      Gore knew everyone from Roy Cohn to Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman, from JFK to Jack Kerouac, from Tennessee Williams to Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.
      They're full of anecdotes, literary and celebrity gossip, if you find that kind of writing entertaining.
      I did.

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris9349 Год назад

    Divine

  • @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb1214
    @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb1214 4 года назад +1

    Oh today really came when I realized just how disposable am I
    I sit I am up and walking then right back down along the way
    My loves My Passion and I am only to think of me just how disposable I be
    The others walk by their eyes do glance at the disposable man he is too tired to dance
    Ambition at rest alone without loneliness it is really melancholy that so many egos but few really exist
    Hard to be righteous in modern times it really is
    a kind touch may not mean an ego has been layed out
    Some eyes they are sweeping the world for a glance A glimmer of chance in someones eye
    Perhaps it may just be the light from a single star
    one of billions shining light strikes their eye as if to say you are just one of so many
    A few before and after there will be plenty
    now look to the sky you will see so many stars glimmer in the darkened sky alone and disposable on a hurtling world ever moving as I until my ambition could not even muster to cry for those who came before me and to all the plenty who will surely pass me by
    as I lay seemingly asleep no one will weep no one will have much care so disposable I died
    A heart broken how disposable am I well not at all disposable think I then
    before I sat and pondered the answer of this horrible lie that I should be disposable and not knowing why
    As if it were programmed the answer comes by on a quiet wave as it takes to the shore Everyone ends this we know by and by all the lives are disposable all of us you and I

  • @billhaywood3503
    @billhaywood3503 Год назад +1

    met him once

  • @bellringer929
    @bellringer929 3 года назад

    Good night ❤️

  • @DaveGrizzly4535
    @DaveGrizzly4535 4 года назад +1

    i was born in san Francisco would i have loved to meet u from one frost to another not sure if we were ever related but its nice to think u could be a relative of mine...

  • @bobydoll7300
    @bobydoll7300 2 года назад

    Nice

  • @DaveGrizzly4535
    @DaveGrizzly4535 4 года назад

    my parents were born in the late 60s i the late 1980s,

  • @patrickrollins2710
    @patrickrollins2710 4 года назад +2

    12:40 Damn he spilled a good sum of his bev

    • @skeptigal2785
      @skeptigal2785 3 года назад

      But living independently still at 88, so good for him; he died this same year.

  • @janet4643
    @janet4643 Год назад

    Sages are the people of old!

  • @odalysperez1433
    @odalysperez1433 5 лет назад +2

    A pleasant man and poet

    • @icecreamforcrowhurst
      @icecreamforcrowhurst 4 года назад +1

      Pleasant? I’m not so sure of that. Fiercely intelligent, supremely witty, brilliant, engaging, inspiring oh yes! But pleasant probably doesn’t accurately describe his persona. Like many of us he apparently had his shortcomings in his family relationships.

  • @nickandmikec
    @nickandmikec 2 года назад

    "Which of Robert Frost's poems is your favorite?" "Who?" said the young man at 9:24 in. Isn't that the way fame is?

  • @hugomarkl6572
    @hugomarkl6572 11 месяцев назад

    Can't help it, but Christmas feels like murder.

  • @Guillermoor
    @Guillermoor 6 лет назад +1

    @Neon Beat I want to add spanish subtitles to it, so some friends who don´t understand english can enjoy it too, can you enable the comunity contribution, please?

    • @worthawatch6981
      @worthawatch6981  6 лет назад +1

      Done. Would love to see Spanish translations

    • @Guillermoor
      @Guillermoor 6 лет назад +1

      Thank you. I'll work on it...Perhaps, do you know if "Beto", the poet he speaks of at the beggining, is Vachel Lindsay? or is he refering to other poet? I cannot find it out.

    • @worthawatch6981
      @worthawatch6981  6 лет назад

      At what time marker?

    • @Guillermoor
      @Guillermoor 6 лет назад

      3:03

    • @worthawatch6981
      @worthawatch6981  6 лет назад +1

      I listened to 3:03, and I'm sorry but I don't understand what you're asking about. I didn't hear him refer to "Beto," although I hear him refer to Lindsay.
      I remember reading about this visit/speech/reading he gave, and it's about one university president dying, and another taking his place at the school.

  • @bellringer929
    @bellringer929 3 года назад

    No disrespect intended to Mr Frost but i can't stop getting distracted by so many beautiful faces in the audience......they make my heartbeat pause...and go fast...like my heart is tumbling down...to woods...where live shades and voices...which ...😑

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris9349 Год назад

    Documentary 63

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris9349 Год назад

    Well

  • @blaketheband
    @blaketheband 4 года назад

    I just set The Road Not Taken to original music, you can check it out here: ruclips.net/video/rvZ3HLcbZDY/видео.html

  • @Tubetopfan1
    @Tubetopfan1 7 лет назад +2

    Frost often seemed to chafe whenever someone read more into his poems than was his intention. But then again, he often seemed to add a certain level of deliberate ambiguity and/or contradiction in many of his poems.

    • @fartkerson
      @fartkerson 6 лет назад +1

      i suppose it's like trying to interpret all of the lines in a gesture drawing -- well, it's not a complete and fleshed out painting, it's a bunch of lines drawn in quick succession describing the movement and flow of the subject, yet not accurately describing the anatomy. art is art, it is not life. any artist will chafe (inwardly or out) at the thought of someone using their work as a functional specification. that's an architect's job, not a poet's. a poet describes things that aren't necessarily truth, but subjective feeling or pure frustration, like a sledge hammer coming down onto a concrete slab in another dimension outside of our universe... you can't describe it because it doesn't follow our known laws.

  • @deborahrobertson8606
    @deborahrobertson8606 2 года назад

    A remarkable poet, however his arrogant, ignorant and boorish reaction to the English gamekeeper "shamed" Edward Thomas into volunteering for the First World War and his rapid death. By that time Robert Frost was safe at home. Thus England lost yet one more of her finest men.

  • @fartkerson
    @fartkerson 6 лет назад

    Who? Robert. Frost.

  • @DenMokin
    @DenMokin 8 лет назад

    Johnny cash!

  • @shelleyharris9349
    @shelleyharris9349 Год назад

    JFK

  • @tommythompson7941
    @tommythompson7941 2 года назад

    Pro-American poet. Did I hear that right?

  • @akapinku459
    @akapinku459 4 года назад

    this is so boring lmao..

    • @damiendaviswatchmanofephra2660
      @damiendaviswatchmanofephra2660 4 года назад +4

      Go and do something then.

    • @icecreamforcrowhurst
      @icecreamforcrowhurst 4 года назад +4

      I guess poetry isn’t your thing. It’s too bad because a person could learn a lot from this. Personally I’m totally fascinated by Robert Frost, I’m trippin’ on this.