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Robert Frost ROBERT FROST
The Art of Poetry No. 2
Interviewed by Richard Poirier
Issue 24, Summer-Fall 1960
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From the Interview
INTERVIEWER
Making couplets “offhand” is something like writing on schedule, isn’t it? I know a young poet who claims he can write every morning from six to nine, presumably before class.

FROST
Well, there’s more than one way to skin a cat. I don’t know what that would be like, myself. When I get going on something, I don’t want to just, you know. . . . Very first one I wrote I was walking home from school and I began to make it—a March day—and I was making it all afternoon and making it so I was late at my grandmother’s for dinner. I finished it, but it burned right up, just burned right up, you know. And what started that? What burned it? So many talk, I wonder how falsely, about what it costs them, what agony it is to write. I’ve often been quoted: “No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader.” But another distinction I made is: however sad, no grievance, grief without grievance. How could I, how could anyone have a good time with what cost me too much agony, how could they? What do I want to communicate but what a hell of a good time I had writing it? The whole thing is performance and prowess and feats of association. Why don’t critics talk about those things—what a feat it was to turn that that way, and what a feat it was to remember that, to be reminded of that by this? Why don’t they talk about that? Scoring. You’ve got to score. They say not, but you’ve got to score, in all the realms—theology, politics, astronomy, history, and the country life around you.
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Summer 2010
INTERVIEW
R. Crumb, David Mitchell
FICTION
Katherine Dunn
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Julia Whitty
MEMOIR
Wenguang Huang, Victor LaValle
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Matthew Zapruder
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Jeff Antebi
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Arnaut Daniel, T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Robert Lowell, Archibald MacLeish, Ezra Pound, Karl Shapiro, Richard Aldington, Bertran de Born, Robert Burns, H. D., Dante, Richard Edwards, Ford Madox Ford, Richard Garnett, John Helston, William James, D. H. Lawrence, Walter de la Mare, Edward Marsh, John Masefield, F. O. Matthiessen, Hugo Munsterberg, George Herbert Palmer, Jane Porter, Richard Anthony Proctor, Edwin Arlington Robinson, Fred Robinson, Josiah Royce, George Santayana, James Shirley, Sophocles, Wallace Stevens, Edward Thomas, Lionel Trilling, Louis Untermeyer, William Wordsworth, W. B. Yeats
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