[New-Poetry] Van Doren and Frost
JforJames at aol.com
JforJames at aol.com
Thu Jul 19 22:30:21 EDT 2007
I went to a lovely event last evening. About an hour from here in Litchfield
County, at the U-Conn extension campus in Torringtion, Charles (Charlie) Van
Doren delivered an informal lecture on Robert Frost. He read 18 poems,
interspersed with commentary and close reading (finding the 'appall' among all
those aspects of white in the poem "Design") or reminiscing over when he first
encountered this or that poem, and how it affected him then and now.
The audience was not primarily students or the usual suspects at poetry
readings. They were mostly people from the community, folks from the surrounding
towns come out to hear an intelligent man talk about poetry.
All the palaver about the loss of the 'audience for poetry' seemed pretty
silly last night. What we need are more poets and teachers willing to engage
their communities with a subject they so dearly & evidently love.
Among the poems he read and talked about was this one....
The Last Mowing
There’s a place called Faraway Meadow
We never shall mow in again,
Or such is the talk of the farmhouse:
The meadow is finished with men.
Then now is the chance for the flowers
That can’t stand mowers and plowers.
It must be now, though, in season
Before trees, seeing the opening,
March into a shadowy claim.
The trees are all I’m afraid of,
That flowers can’t bloom in the shade of;
It’s no more men I’m afraid of;
The meadow is done with the tame.
The place for the moment is ours
For you, oh tumultuous flowers,
To go to waste and go wild in,
All shapes and colors of flowers,
I needn’t call you by name.
--Robert Frost
************************************** Get a sneak peek of the all-new AOL at
http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://wiz.cath.vt.edu/pipermail/new-poetry/attachments/20070719/552037ad/attachment.html
More information about the New-Poetry
mailing list