Fifty-plus years ago a then-young English- and American Literature major walked out of a college bookstore with this hardcover copy of
Complete Poems of Robert Frost. The $7.00 expense was substantial in those years, but he considered the book an appropriate addition to his personal library.
Since then the book has traveled with him from Boston to Dallas to Lexington to Indianapolis to St. Louis and finally to Madison. The next destination will be as a donation to our local
Friends of the Fitchburg Library book sale. Before saying goodbye to an old friend, I thought it appropriate to give it one final cover-to-cover read. Herewith some gleanings from that book.
Uncommon words:
"With a big
jag to empty in a bay" (a load, as of hay)
"Not old
Grandsir's/Nor Granny's surely..." (
grandsire is archaic for grandfather)
"But there's a
dite too many of them for comfort" (???)
"Choked with oil of cedar/And
scurf of plants" ("scaly matter or incrustation on a surface")
"...they smelled/A thing the least bit doubtfully
perscented" (?neologism)
"The lines of a good
helve were native to the grain" (handle of an ax, hatchet, hammer (ME,OE))
(re turtle eggs) "All packed in sand to
wait the trump together." (sound of a trumpet)
"...nothing Fate could do/With
codlin moth or rusty parasite" (codling moth larvae feed on apple)
"The storm gets down his neck in an icy
souse" (soaking)
"By grace of state-manipulated
pelf" (disparaging term for money, from ME/OF=booty)
"On our
cisatlantic shore" (attaching the prefix meaning "on this side")
"But
spes alit agricolam 'tis said." ("hope sustains the farmer")
"As if by eye pairs out of forty
firkins" (container of size one-quarter of a barrel)
"We would pour oil on the
ingle" (fire burning in hearth; fireplace (Gael.)
"And
dayify the darkest realm" (presumably a neologism and the prerogative of a poet)
"The wavy upflung
pennons of the corn" (flag borne on lance of knight [from Latin
pinna=feather])
"For all humanity a complete rest/From all this
wagery." (?working for wages?)
"The other way of reading back and forth/Known as
boustrophedon, was found too awkward."
"Behind her at the dashboard of his
pung." (sleigh with boxlike body on runners [short for “tom-pung” = toboggan]
"The bulb lights
sicken down." (presumably get weaker?)
Memorable lines or clever turns of phrase
(re a farmhand)
"Poor Silas, so concerned for other folk,
And nothing to look backward to with pride,
And nothing to look forward to with hope,
So now and never any different."
"Home is the place where, when you have to go there,
They have to take you in." (did Frost invent this phrase?)
(re a mountainside brook):
"Warm in December, cold in June, you say?
I don't suppose the water's changed at all.
You and I know enough to know it's warm
Compared with cold, and cold compared with warm
But all the fun's in how you say a thing."
"We love the things we love for what they are."
"Baptiste knew
how to make a short job long
For love of it and yet not waste time either..."
"From my advantage on a hill
I judged that such a crystal chill
Was only
adding frost to snow
As gilt to gold that wouldn't show."
"When I was young my teachers were the old...
I went to school to age to learn the past...
Now I am old my teachers are the young...
I go to school to youth to learn the future."
"But I may be one who does not care
Ever to have tree bloom or bear.
Leaves for smooth and bark for rough,
Leaves and bark may be tree enough." (the same sentiment as in
this Denise Levertov poem)
(re life):
"It lives less in the present
Than in the future always,
And less in both together
Than in the past. The present
Is too much for the senses,
Too crowding, too confusing -
Too present to imagine."
Miscellaneous
"And the
cagèd yellow bird/Hung over her in tune..."
In my edition, the word cagèd is printed with that accent (not true in many reprints of the poem). I presume Frost did this to alter the meter of the line. I didn't see him employ this device elsewhere in the book and wonder if it is a common technique used by poets.
"The new moon!/What shoulder did I see her over?" (It is said to be
unlucky to see the new moon over your left shoulder, but lucky to see it over your right shoulder.)
(re orchard on a northerly slope) (?true)
"No orchard's the worse for the wintriest storm;
But one thing about it, it mustn't get warm.
'How often already you've had to be told,
Keep cold, young orchard. Good-by and keep cold.
Dread fifty above more than fifty below."
(re barn doors):
"The advantage-disadvantage of these doors
Was that tramp taking sanctuary there
Must leave them unlocked to betray his presence.
They could be locked but from the outside only...
And it had almost given him troubled dreams
To think that though he could not lock himself in,
The cheapest tramp that came along that way
Could mischievously lock him in to stay."
"As a brief epidemic of microbes/ That
in a good glass may be seen to crawl..." (I've heard the term "good glass" applied to telescopes. Presumably the reference is similar here, to lens glass that is free of imperfections) ??
(re Santa Claus):
"We all know
his address, Mount Hekla, Iceland./So anyone can write to him who has to" (???)
Links to my favorite poems
Mending Wall
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Birches (
and audio)
The Road Not Taken
And now, goodbye old friend.
Reposted from nine years ago to take a break from doomscrolling.