Kay Ryan, formerly a remedial college English teacher for 33 years, is a recent discovery and winner of two major poetry prizes, writes an essay about her analysis of Frost's private notebooks: --I Demand to Speak with God
by Kay Ryan
The Notebooks of Robert Frost. Ed. by Robert
Faggen. The Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press. $39.95.
Reading Frost's private notebooks is the opposite of
pulling back the curtain on Oz. While the real Oz
turns out to be a little man working a big speaker
system, the real Frost turns out to be someone
naturally—preternaturally—amplified even when
nobody else is listening. The Notebooks of Robert
Frost is his collected scraps, none of it written for an
audience; it is the not-poetry, not-letters,
not-lectures; it is the teacher's book lists and
lecturer's notes, private reminders, scotched ideas,
trial balloons, epigram practice sheets, scraps of
plays and drafts of verse, fulminations and
less-than-fulminations—all exactly as they came,
except no longer in Frost's blocky hand (though his
ink colors are duly noted). Over the course of 688
pages, Frost has the answer for everything and the
counter question—repeated to the Fth power.
-------------------------------------------------------
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/feature.ht
ml?id=180020 -- to read the rest of this great essay.


Reply With Quote