People long to find a passion in their lives, something they can not put down or forget. 
            
 Robert Frost found his love in poetry and nature.  Robert Frost was brought into this
            
 world in San Francisco, on March 26, 1874.  As a young boy, Robert Frost  had a normal
            
 life for a late-nineteenth century schoolboy.  His environment changed after his father's
            
 death, when he moved to Massachusetts in 1885.  In Massachusetts, Frost fell in love with
            
 the New England atmosphere and decided to attend Dartmouth College.  After only one
            
 semester, Frost transferred to Harvard to study classic literature.  It was here that Frost
            
 learned about and was influenced by classical poets such as Horace.  Even as a student at
            
 Harvard, he found time to write poetry, sending his work to local magazines and papers
            
 hoping that they would be published.  Soon after Frost's college years he inherited a New
            
 Hampshire farm, which allowed him to rekindle his relationship with the New England
            
 environment.  This relationship helped inspire him to write many of his great poems, such
            
 as "Birches", "Spring Pools" and "Sitting By a Bush in Broad Sunlight."  Later, Frost
            
 moved on to be an accomplished teacher and writer.  From his early forties to  his death in
            
 1963 he was a world renowned poet.  Robert Frost wrote about simple things-snowy
            
 days, the woods, the changing color of the leaves and used them to address American
            
 fundamentals and values, as he became a master poet in his own time.
            
 	Robert Frost used many different styles in his work.  One of the techniques Frost
            
 used to write with was meter, but he concentrated on rhythm.  Frost's poetry was known
            
 for its graceful style in simple words; he was praised for being a direct straight forward
            
 writer.  Frost was never too questionable in his writing but not always easy to understand. 
            
 "His effects even at their simplest, depend upon a ...