Supreme status 1) hell of a dull and lonely place there are two) are removed from a distance all of the general harm: 3) flat there is a shadow, sad land, 4) my poem can not say never May be those solemn manor. 5) I walked between them, I was well aware of them very: 6) They I had hit them for a little star in my life because it was stupid and lazy It was. And I know that their scarred eyebrows are difficult to say. 9) But when I am on the road, 10) in the dark, they disappear one by one, 11) Until the eternal day of God, 12) All my glory dream has disappeared - 13), and the frustration of a fool is a frustration 14) I heard a dead song singing under the sun.
Edwin Arlington Robinson was born in 1869 in a small village in the main state tide head. (Louis 8) his family has a long, had been respected; he came to his mother from the sister of the Massachusetts Bay Colony governor and poet Anne Brad Treat. (Heiney pg.248) Robinson is the youngest of three children. His mother, Mary Elizabeth Palmer, is a woman with a literary hobby, but perhaps some people are skeptical about the quality of this hobby. (Coxe, p. 8) Robinson's father, Edward Robinson, is an insensitive person who may express more sympathy for his oldest and youngest boys in various situations. (Coxe, p. 8) Harman, the biggest child, is destined to manage family property, but Dean, who is an intermediate child, wants to become a doctor. This gave Edwin the opportunity to pursue his dream. (Ellsworth, page 34)
Edwin Arlington Robinson was born on the tide of Maine on 22nd December 1869. He is the third son of the three sons and is believed to be disappointed by his mother who wants her daughter. His father doubted the value of higher education, but Robinson studied at Harvard University from 1891 to 1893. In the 1890s, his family's wealth began to decline, eventually leading to a series of tragedies affecting Edwin's life and poetry. In 1892 his father died. Due to panic in 1893, the family went bankrupt in the next seven years. Edwin 's brother Dean is addicted to morphine and returns home for his health. For family bankruptcy and mother's health, Edwin was obliged to leave Harvard. In 1896 his mother died of a disease of the upper body characterized by mucous membranes characterized by throat pain, fever, tonsils, pharynx, nose, "black and white thirsty". Back then, this is a terrible disease.