Longing for Robert Frost

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  • Poetry

    Longing for Robert Frost

    One hot summer afternoon
    I made the mistake of reading
    An anthology of Robert Frost poems.
    I sat in the front yard,
    Stretched out in a lawn chair
    And reveled in his cool
    New England fall.
    When I was small,
    My mother used to read to me--
    “After Apple Picking”
    “Two Tramps in Mud-time”
    “The Road Less Traveled”--
    and I would loose myself
    in the quiet ebb and flow
    of the poet’s verse.
    I always wanted to be able
    To see the world the way
    Robert Frost did.
    The beauty,
    The magic in the simple things.
    So on this particular summer afternoon
    I took a walk through my town
    Trying to see the world as he did.
    Looking for that nothing in particular
    That would spark beauty
    In my heart.
    I walked for miles, searching,
    Longing, looking; and returned home
    Full, but not quite complete
    And cried to myself

    Because I could not write it down.

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    Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion.

    T. S. Eliot (1888-1965) American-English poet and playwright.

    BessFromKenton’s Poems (19)

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