Robert Frost was symbolic; a deep writer that affiliated his world with his poetry. He is a writer with a great perspective on the world and how things connect. He stayed true to his writing and what kind of writer he thought he was. Frost produced numerous works of poetry that followed the same scheme with a deeper meaning. Robert Frost was a real poet that stuck to his type of writing. He had a real symbolic meaning behind all of his poems. Nothing was ever literal or verbatim, but held a deeper more personal meaning. An example of this would be his poem "Birches". Literally, this poem is about trees and a boy that he spends his time with, testing them. But there is more to this symbolically. In more depth it talks about death and how it is not his time to leave so the "trees" set him back down to stay. Birches is a complex poem with many symbolic parts. It goes along with who he was as a symbolic writer. Not only was Frost a symbolic writer, but was also a very natural, down to earth poet. His poem "Mending Wall," is a good representation of this. This is a highly relatable poem, but was also very personal to Frost. It has a greater, symbolic meaning to it but it also was very down to earth and relatable. Many of his poems resemble this and are a representation of his past. Finally, Robert Frost was true to his claim of his writing because of his use of lymric poems. Frost was very common for the use of the same style of poem throughout his poetry. He also does not use similes or metaphors in his poetry. He kept a consistent pattern and rhythm when writing his poetry. He stayed true to his claim and kept a consistent use of literary elements and styles to connect all of his writing. Others may say that Robert Frost alienated the type of writer he claimed to be. They may say that some of his poems do not contain the same characteristics as other poems. They may argue that some of his poems like "The Road Not Taken" is not symb