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Unread 07-30-2011, 03:41 AM
Gregory Dowling Gregory Dowling is offline
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Location: Venice, Italy
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Thanks for posting this, Duncan. Very fascinating. I knew that Frost had written "The Road Not Taken" partly with Thomas in mind and had read the correspondence, which is preserved at Cardiff University Library. I had never realised how personally Thomas took it. To tell the truth, I had always felt rather comforted by the fact that so intelligent a reader as Thomas had apparently "misread" the poem, as I did on my first reading, missing the "trickiness" and taking it at face-value as a straightforward declaration of sturdy American "self-reliance".

Frost wrote an elegy for Thomas, "To E.T.", which appears in New Hampshire and is fairly well-known. However, rather less famous is a later poem, "Iris by Night", from A Further Range, which draws on memories of a walk in the Malverns together. Here it is:

Quote:
One misty evening, one another’s guide,
We two were groping down a Malvern side
The last wet fields and dripping hedges home.
There came a moment of confusing lights,
Such as according to belief in Rome
Were seen of old at Memphis on the heights
Before the fragments of a former sun
Could concentrate anew and rise as one.
Light was a paste of pigment in our eyes.
And then there was a moon and then a scene
So watery as to seem submarine;
In which we two stood saturated, drowned.
The clover-mingled rowan on the ground
Had taken all the water it could as dew,
And still the air was saturated too,
Its airy pressure turned to water weight.
Then a small rainbow like a trellis gate,
A very small moon-made prismatic bow,
Stood closely over us through which to go.
And then we were vouchsafed the miracle
That never yet to other two befell
And I alone of us have lived to tell.
A wonder! Bow and rainbow as it bent,
Instead of moving with us as we went,
(To keep the pots of gold from being found)
It lifted from its dewy pediment
Its two mote-swimming many-colored ends,
And gathered them together in a ring.
And we two stood in it softly circled round
From all division time or foe can bring
In a relation of elected friends.
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