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- Robert Frost: Collected Poems
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-
- (May 15, 1939)
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- The Muse of Robert Frost, No. 1 of living U.S. poets, has been
- his wife. Since her death, a year ago, he has gathered
- practically all his published poetry (about a third of what he
- has written) in his Collected Poems. In the book's
- characteristically half-evasive, half-outspoken forward, The
- Figure a Poem Makes, Frost says: "It (a poem) begins in delight
- and ends in wisdom. The figure is the same as for love." Frost's
- book begins in knowledge and ends in perplexity: but the figure
- it makes is Frost himself.
-
- As they wear onward, Frost's Collected Poems show an
- increasing selfcomplacence of poetic purpose: from the initial
- effort to write true things acceptable to his Muse to writing
- good things acceptable to himself -- no small achievement, since
- Frost is a hard man to please. As the craftiest artist among
- American poets, he has attracted an audience who likens his
- poems' sound and sense -- without quite knowing which is which.
- Sometimes Frost seems to strike a perfect balance, as in his
- famous Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.
-
- In this perfect anthology-piece the anti-biographical sense
- of the word "promises" is more theatrical than sincere: the only
- real promise that Frost has ever tried to keep has been to be
- himself.
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