Robert Frost's "Oven Bird" in Robert Frost's 1916 poem "The Oven Bird" (Baym, Vol.D 1188) has chosen a title that shows a single natural image of a particular bird. . This title uses not only birds of the "middle and middle-aged forest" but also "singer-songwriter" of the first line, "the image of nature" as the theme of poetry. This bird's song presents images of "hard trunk", "flower", "pear and cherry" while applying a personal voice to the landscape.
In "Fridge Bird" by Robert Frost, Frost uses the image of the bird singing in the forest and shows artist skills as an artist. Once these poems are judged to be of art, they will begin to see how they explain the process of making this art. In Frost's poem, the first artist himself was a bird in the first two lines. The reader considers the artist "a singer that everyone has heard, / in the middle of midsummer and a loud tree bird in the middle". These lines simply set the artist's metaphor to the bird in the middle of the forest. Frost expresses the artist as "trunk of trunk again", but it may be silent. This shows that artists can vivid the trustworthy reality of our daily lives by "sound". This poem is about the arts of contemporary artists. This is further explained in the last few lines of Sonnets.
The birds in the oven sing at dusk, that wonderful tone - "teacher, teacher, teacher" will surely beat frost for that hint. This is a different species from the South American oven and Frost pointed out at Darwin's Big Journey which is one of his favorite books. Oven birds made nests on the ground and looked like a big oven with a door. The nest, like a human house, also has a front chamber and an inner chamber. Darwin believes that this bird may give clues to the relationship of all living things. Like "Odilo Haku Bumblebee", Frost is very pleased to confuse seed with the purposes of poetry. He may do this because he made sonnets for popular singers and announced this boldly: