- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 248
2:57
Poet: Robert Frost
Robert Frost is one of the most famous and respected poets of the 20th century. Learn abou...
published: 17 Nov 2012
Poet: Robert Frost
Robert Frost is one of the most famous and respected poets of the 20th century. Learn about the life of this prolific writer in this biography video from About.com.
- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 248
1:06
GSG 117 "No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader." Robert Frost BE COMPELLING
Click http://www.GoShiggyGo.BlogSpot.Com for MORE
"No tears in the writer, no tears in the...
published: 10 Jun 2012
GSG 117 "No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader." Robert Frost BE COMPELLING
Click http://www.GoShiggyGo.BlogSpot.Com for MORE
"No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader.
No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader." Robert Frost
- published: 10 Jun 2012
- views: 12
1:19
Top 10 List of Nobel Prize Winning Writer
Top 10 List of Nobel Prize Winning Writer
To Subscribe Our Channel Please Click Below Link...
published: 27 Feb 2013
Top 10 List of Nobel Prize Winning Writer
Top 10 List of Nobel Prize Winning Writer
To Subscribe Our Channel Please Click Below Link: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=pastimers
In the Top 10 List website we always keep a list in potential matter. This time we talk about the Nobel Prize winning writer with making a list. We hope that our audience will like this list. In our website we always put the right information in our list. We hope that our Top 10 List will be very informative to our audience.
1. Rabindranath Tagore: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Rabindranath Tagore in the 1st place. He is the all time great bangle writer. He was born in 1861 and died in 1941. In translation his poetry was viewed as spiritual and mercurial; his seemingly mesmeric persona, floccose locks, and empyreal garb garnered him a prophet-like aura in the West. He was the first non-European who won the Nobel Prize
2. Mark Twain: In our Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Mark Twain in the 2nd place. He is the inventor of American Nobel with Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, and one of the all-time greatest novelists, humorists, essayists, critics and all-around authors. He was born in 1835 and died in 1910.
3. Leo Tolstoy: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Leo Tolstoy in the 3rd place. He is the greatest exemplar of literary realism in history, and possibly the greatest novelist in history. His two most titanic works, War and Peace and Anna Karenina, would have been more than sufficient to secure Knut Hamsun an award. Neo Tolstoy was born in 1828 and died in 1910.
4. James Joyce: In our Top 10 List of Nobel Prize Winning Writer we keep James Joyce in the 4th place. HE is the greatest Irish writer, besides W. B. Yeats who did win the prize. Joyce is also the greatest writer of stream of consciousness fiction in history. He was invented the modern idea of speculative fiction, with his final work, Finnegans Wake, which is almost unreadable. This writer was born in 1882 and died in 1941.
5. Marcel Proust: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Marcel Proust in the 5th place. The author of the most monumental work of 20th-Century fiction, A la Recherche du Temps Perdu, In Search of Lost Time. It's a 7-volume novel which exhibits one of the first, if not the first, example of stream of consciousness writing. This famous poet was born in 1871 and died in 1922.
6. Henrik Ibsen: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Henrik Ibsen in the 6th place. He is Norway's greatest author and one of the finest modern dramatic writers in history. He had 6 chances to win, since the award was begun in 1901, but he lost due to arguments over Alfred Nobel's eligibility requirements, as laid out in his will. He was born in 1826 and died in 1906.
7. Emile Zola: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Emile Zola in the 7th place. He is the great writer in French history. He wrote over 30 novels, and any one of them could have gotten a Pulitzer today, without competition. His Nobel Prize winning writer was born in 1840 and died in 1902.
8. Robert Frost: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Robert Frost in the 8th place. He was born in 1874 and died in 1963. He is the greatest 20th Century American Poet, by far. He won 4 (FOUR!) Pulitzer Prizes for his poetry was awarded over 40 honorary doctorates from Oxford, Cambridge, Princeton and Harvard, among others.
9. W. H. Auden: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep W. H. Auden in the 9th place. One of the greatest 20th Century poets in history, he won the Pulitzer, the National Book Award and profoundly influenced all poets, especially English-speaking poets, who have come after him. This famous poet was born in 1907 and died in 1973.
10. Vladimir Nabokov: In the Top 10 List of Nobel Prize winning writer we keep Vladimir Nabokov in the Vladimir Nabokov in the 10th place. One of the greatest non-native writers of English, Nabokov's most famous novel, and his finest, is Lolita. He wrote many more excellent works of fiction and criticism as well as translations of poetry. This famous Swedish was born in 1899 and died in 1977.
- published: 27 Feb 2013
- views: 39
1:35
Surprise!
When Surprises Without "R".... http://bigsuprises.com
Surprise quotes:
Be Prepared... t...
published: 05 Feb 2013
Surprise!
When Surprises Without "R".... http://bigsuprises.com
Surprise quotes:
Be Prepared... the meaning of the motto is that a scout must prepare himself by previous thinking out and practicing how to act on any accident or emergency so that he is never taken by surprise. -Robert Baden-Powell
Whenever death may surprise us, let it be welcome if our battle cry has reached even one receptive ear and another hand reaches out to take up our arms. -Che Guevara
Don't tell people how to do things, tell them what to do and let them surprise you with their results. -George S. Patton
Everything that is new or uncommon raises a pleasure in the imagination, because it fills the soul with an agreeable surprise, gratifies its curiosity, and gives it an idea of which it was not before possessed. -Joseph Addison
Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity. -George S. Patton
The husband who decides to surprise his wife is often very much surprised himself. -Voltaire
Society is always taken by surprise at any new example of common sense. -Ralph Waldo Emerson
The secret to humor is surprise. -Aristotle
There is no surprise more magical than the surprise of being loved: It is God's finger on man's shoulder. -Charles Morgan
The only thing that should surprise us is that there are still some things that can surprise us. -Francois de La Rochefoucauld
A true leader always keeps an element of surprise up his sleeve, which others cannot grasp but which keeps his public excited and breathless. -Charles de Gaulle
No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader. -Robert Frost
The moments of happiness we enjoy take us by surprise. It is not that we seize them, but that they seize us. -Ashley Montagu
Man is always more than he can know of himself; consequently, his accomplishments, time and again, will come as a surprise to him. -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Poetry should surprise by a fine excess and not by singularity, it should strike the reader as a wording of his own highest thoughts, and appear almost a remembrance. -John Keats
Death never takes the wise man by surprise, he is always ready to go. -Jean de La Fontaine
It is great to be a blonde. With low expectations it's very easy to surprise people. -Pamela Anderson
What a lovely surprise to finally discover how unlonely being alone can be. -Ellen Burstyn
It's no surprise that White people say things when they are together about Black people. -Henry Louis Gates
There is an organic affinity between joyousness and tenderness, and their companionship in the saintly life need in no way occasion surprise. -William James
The backbone of surprise is fusing speed with secrecy. -Karl Von Clausewitz
Well, I was already so happy being chosen to do the issue itself, that when I got on the cover, it was even more of a surprise and even more amazing to me. -Heidi Klum
Sometimes you surprise the goalkeeper and sometimes the goalkeeper surprises you. In my career, I tried to do more of the first than the second. -Eric Cantona
Whatever extra there is in me at any given moment isn't fully formed. I am hardly aware of it; it awaits the next book. It will - with luck - come to me during the actual writing, and it will take me by surprise. -V. S. Naipaul
All the things that most kids hated, I loved. I loved that things were asked of me and that, much to my surprise, I was able to do them. I loved the 10 o'clock bedtime. I loved the responsibility. -Laura Linney
The rules of suspense are that you do know, and you just don't know when. In the Hitchcock rules of suspense, you are supposed to know that there is a bomb on the bus that might blow up, and then it becomes very tense - but if you don't know that there's a bomb and it just blows up, then it's just a surprise. -Gus Van Sant
I've made movies that we're very successful that we're a complete surprise, and I've made movies that I thought we're going to be very successful that, you know. -Christopher Walken
Interventions are really emotionally exhausting and I would never ever want to have one. In the same way, I would never want to have a surprise birthday party. That would be horrible. -Margaret Cho
I'm writing a new love story, set in eastern North Carolina. Surprise, surprise, huh? -Nicholas Sparks
Statistically, the probability of any one of us being here is so small that you'd think the mere fact of existing would keep us all in a contented dazzlement of surprise. -Lewis Thomas
Though times have changed, it's a nice surprise to see that youthful feeling of anti-war sentiment returning once more to the cobbled main streets of Europe. -Cat Stevens
We grew up in a very creative environment and were exposed to the arts at a very young age, so it's not a surprise that all of us are in some form of the arts. -Spike Lee
- published: 05 Feb 2013
- views: 205153
3:28
A Pep Talk from Kid President to You
We all need a little encouragement every now and then. Kid President, knowing this, has pu...
published: 24 Jan 2013
A Pep Talk from Kid President to You
We all need a little encouragement every now and then. Kid President, knowing this, has put together a video you can play each morning as you wake up or to share with your friend who needs a kick in the right direction. Take a moment and spread some encouragement. "It's everybody's duty to give the world a reason to dance." Also, by popular demand, we present the: NOT COOL, ROBERT FROST t-shirt: http://www.cafepress.com/kidpresident
Featuring the song "Households" by Sleeping At Last - http://sleepingatlast.com
with additional music by our pal Skewby - http://somethingaboutskewby.com
Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/iamkidpresident
Be a friend on Facebook: http://facebook.com/kidpresident
Send an email: kid@kidpresident.com
For Press Inquiries, contact: YTpress@soulpancake.com
Created by Kid President and Brad Montague
Special thanks to Robert Frost, that dude from Journey and the movie Space Jam.
Subscribe to our youtube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=SoulPancake
Buy our book! http://book.soulpancake.com
Follow us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/SoulPancake
Tweet us at: http://twitter.com/SoulPancake
- published: 24 Jan 2013
- views: 13481471
1:35
The Poem "Attic Music" Read By The Poet & Novelist Robert Rowe
Poet, Novelist, and Songwriter Robert Rowe reads his lyric poem "Attic Music". Robert Row...
published: 17 Mar 2009
The Poem "Attic Music" Read By The Poet & Novelist Robert Rowe
Poet, Novelist, and Songwriter Robert Rowe reads his lyric poem "Attic Music". Robert Rowe's collection of poetry titled THE POLAR BEAR CLUB can be ordered by contacting Robert at malloir@gmail.com or by phone at 978-496-0166. ©Copyright by Robert Rowe 2000.
Robert is the author of the Novel GARAGE SONGS. A novel about music, songwriting, sibling rivalry, car sales, hiking, football, loss of a brother, transcendence, linguistics, and more. An excerpt and purchase information can be found at garagesongs.org. ©Copyright by Robert Rowe 1998-2004.
Robert has composed over 140 songs in the Lit-Rock acoustic, piano genre; recordings of the songs are available for purchase and for licensing to performers, film companies, and agencies. Please contact Robert at rnrowe@bootbox.net or by phone at 978-496-0166. ©Copyright by Robert Rowe 1990-2009.
Poetry influences include: Seamus Heaney, Agha Shahid Ali, James Tate, Richard Wilbur, E.A. Robinson, Alan Ginsburg, Walt Whitman, Wesley McNair, Kenneth Rosen, Transcendental poetry, Narrative, T.S. Elliot, Robert Frost, Andrew Marvell, Jack Kerouac, Gary Soto, E.A. Robinson, Gregory Corso, Elizabeth Bishop, Jon Haner, Yeats, Mary Reuffel, and Dara Wier, Gary Soto, Ogden Nash, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau,
Description words include: modern, Poet, poetry, literary, poem, music, acoustic, guitar, music, poem, lyrics, singer, guitar, composer, new, lyrical, Songwriter, Novelist, and Maine, Massachusetts, new, modern, rock, folk, metaphor, garage songs, garagesongs, New England, transcendence
- published: 17 Mar 2009
- views: 440
5:04
5 Poems by Robert Frost
Robert Frost ( 1874-1963)
"I had a lover's quarrel with the world." - epitaph on Rober...
published: 07 Aug 2010
5 Poems by Robert Frost
Robert Frost ( 1874-1963)
"I had a lover's quarrel with the world." - epitaph on Robert Frost's grave.
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco March 26, 1874. After his father, William Prescott Frost Jr, a journalist at the San Francisco Bulletin, died of tuberculosis when Robert was 11, his mother, Isabelle Moodie moved the family to Lawrence, Massachusetts to be with Frosts's grandfather who was an overseer at a factory in the mill city. Frost attended Lawrence High School. He briefly attended Dartmouth College, but returned home to work at various jobs including aiding her mother teach. (1)
In 1894 he sold his poem, "My Butterfly: an Elegy," for fifteen dollars to the New York Independent. After marrying Elinor Miriam White in December 1895, and their first child, Elliot was born in 1896. He attended Harvard for two years beginning in 1897. He left Harvard in part due to health reasons and also to support his new family. His second child was born in 1899.
In 1900 Frost's first child, Elliot, died of Cholera in July. In October, he moved his family to a farm in Derry, New Hampshire that his grandfather had bought for him. Then, in November, his mother died.
Between 1902 and 1907 the Frosts had five more children. Their sixth child died shortly after birth. Frost moved his Family to the U.K. Where he published his first collection of poetry, "North of Boston." In England Frost befriended Ezra Pound who wrote favorably of Frost's poetry.
Frost was interested in reproducing American vernacular speech in his work. Frost said "the ear was the only true writer and the only true reader." (2)
The Frosts returned to America as World War I began in 1915. In Summers from 1921 until 1962 Frost taught at Bread Loaf School of Middlebury College in Vermont. Frost won many Awards for his poetry during his life including four Pulitzer Prizes. Like his mother he suffered from depression throughout his life.
Robert Frost died January 29, 1963.
==============================
Text of poems
Mowing
http://www.poemtree.com/poems/Mowing.htm
Desert Places
http://www.internal.org/Robert_Frost/Desert_Places
The Most of It
http://www.bookofjoe.com/2005/10/the_most_of_it_.html
Tree at My Window
http://www.internal.org/Robert_Frost/Tree_at_my_Window
Unharvested
http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2004/08/21
==============================
Webliography
Wikipedia: Robert Frost (note 1)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Frost
Modern American Poetry: Robert Frost's Life and Career (note 2)
http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/a_f/frost/life.htm
Frost Friends: Chronology
http://www.frostfriends.org/chronology.html
=============================
Sites of interest
Robert Frost Farm
http://robertfrostfarm.org/
- published: 07 Aug 2010
- views: 29831
112:28
Our Life in Six Lyrical Poems: Robert Frost
Poetry course conducted by Michael Braziller with guest poet Edward Hirsch....
published: 30 Nov 2007
Our Life in Six Lyrical Poems: Robert Frost
Poetry course conducted by Michael Braziller with guest poet Edward Hirsch.
- published: 30 Nov 2007
- views: 4038
50:55
Richard Wilbur: A Poet Turns 90
In celebration of his 90th birthday, Richard Wilbur, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and ...
published: 04 Mar 2011
Richard Wilbur: A Poet Turns 90
In celebration of his 90th birthday, Richard Wilbur, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and former U.S. Poet Laureate who holds the same teaching position at Amherst College that Robert Frost once did, was honored with a reading of his poems and translations on Wednesday, March 2, 2011.
- published: 04 Mar 2011
- views: 700
25:57
Larry Smith and Rob Smith read their poetry. 6/12/08 part 2 @ "The Lit" .
Of note at the end of this reading a group poem added to by just about everybody at the re...
published: 03 May 2012
Larry Smith and Rob Smith read their poetry. 6/12/08 part 2 @ "The Lit" .
Of note at the end of this reading a group poem added to by just about everybody at the reading per larry's explanation and example at the start of the reading is read.
Recorded at the Literary Cafe in Cleveland's June 2008 poetry reading.
Steve Goldberg writes:
"I met Larry when he was promoting a book of Buddhism inspired poetry that he edited with Ray McNeice, American Zen. Then later when he toured with Monte Page and his flute, Larry enthralled me with his gentle interpretations of Wen Wei translations. I bought the CD. He was good enough to schlep into Cleveland from Sandusky to a reading I organized around a celebratory picnic for the Dalai Lama's birthday, back when I didn't know what I was doing and the poetry community was wondering who I was. His generosity to this nobody was a great example to this budding Buddhist and has been perpetually appreciated.
Larry has worked as a steel mill laborer, a high school teacher, a college professor, and a writer. A graduate of Muskingum College and Kent State University, he is the author of six books of poetry, a book of memoirs, two books of fiction, two literary biographies, a life biography, and a book of translations from the Chinese. The recently appointed Poet Laureate of Huron, Ohio, is the director of the Firelands Writing Center and Editor -in-Chief of Bottom Dog Press, Inc, has recently released a compendium of the Cleveland poetry scene, which we have pimped before and is working on a Russell Salomon book of impressions from his last visit.
Rob Smith's writing was introduced to me by Larry, who published his first book of poetry, Two Hundred Fifty-six Zones of Gray. Known previously as a novelist, he won the 2006 Robert Frost Poetry Award for the poem "Catbird." A strong and lively reader, he has organized a new weekly reading series in the amphitheater of Huron and runs Drinian Press, a publisher of novels, theology, and soon a book of coffeehouse poetry. Rob holds a bachelor's degree in religion and philosophy from Westminster College (Pa) and master and doctoral degrees from Princeton Theological Seminary. He teaches as an adjunct instructor at both Wright State and Bowling Green State Universities in Ohio when he is not restoring an old sloop on Lake Erie."
spongi
- published: 03 May 2012
- views: 17
Youtube results:
3:04
( In HD ) YAN AYRTON - Piano : The freedom of my dreams - Prelude in A flat Major , Op 18, No 2.
" Freedom is the oxygen of life ."YAN AYRTON
"Do not search freedom in any place witho...
published: 19 Apr 2009
( In HD ) YAN AYRTON - Piano : The freedom of my dreams - Prelude in A flat Major , Op 18, No 2.
" Freedom is the oxygen of life ."YAN AYRTON
"Do not search freedom in any place without before find it inside you . " YAN AYRTON
( This video was recorded in HD with a WIDESCREEN image format . Strangely enough it was recieved and processed by YOUTUBE as a streched not widescreen image . WHY THIS ????? ) Yan Ay
Thanks to Marlen , Melissa and Chiquinho to help me record my prelude . You're special friends and relatives
"Any existence deprived of freedom is a kind of death. YAN AYRTON L. Dutt ( Brazilian junior classical composer & musician , author , poet , free thinker and essayist, )
"The secret of happiness is freedom. The secret of freedom is courage.
Thucydides (Ancient Greek historians and author, 460-404bc)
"People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use. Soren Kierkegaard (Danish Philosopher and Theologian, generally recognized as the first existentialist philosopher. 1813-1855)
"For what avail the plough or sail, or land or life, if freedom fail?"Antoine de Saint-Exupery (French Pilot, Writer and Author of 'The Little Prince', 1900-1944)
"Freedom is the will to be responsible to ourselves Friedrich Nietzsche Twilight of the Idols, 1888 (German classical Scholar, Philosopher and Critic of culture, 1844-1900.)
"No one is free when others are oppressed." YAN AYRTON L. Dutt ( Brazilian junior classical composer & musician , author , poet , free thinker and essayist, )
"Freedom in general may be defined as the absence of obstacles to the realization of desires Bertrand Russell (English Logician and Philosopher 1872-1970 )
"The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion. Albert Camus (French Novelist, Essayist and Playwright, 1957 Nobel Prize for Literature, 1913-1960)
"Man is free at the moment he wishes to be. YAN AYRTON L. Dutt ( Brazilian junior classical composer & musician , author , poet , free thinker and essayist, )
He who is brave is free.Voltaire (French Philosopher and Writer. One of the greatest of all French authors, 1694-1778)
We are driven by five genetic needs: survival, love and belonging, power, freedom, and fun.Author Unknown
"Those who desire to give up freedom in order to gain security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one. Benjamin Franklin (American Statesman, Scientist, Philosopher, Printer, Writer and Inventor. 1706-1790)
"We must not believe the many, who say that only free people ought to be educated, but we should rather believe the philosophers who say that only the educated are free
Epictetus (Greek philosopher associated with the Stoics, AD 55-c.135)
"Freedom lies in being bold. Robert Frost (American poet, 1874-1963)
"Freedom has a thousand charms to show,
That slaves, howe'er contented, never know." YAN AYRTON L. Dutt ( Brazilian junior classical composer & musician , author , poet , free thinker and essayist, )
To know how to free oneself is nothing; the arduous thing is to know what to do with one's freedom Andre Gide (French writer, humanist and moralist, 1947 nobel prize for literature, 1869-1951)
There is no such thing as a little freedom. Either you are all free, or you are not free.
Walter Cronkite (American Journalist well known for his role as a television news anchor, b.1916)
"All good things are wild, and free. Henry David Thoreau (American Essayist, Poet and Philosopher, 1817-1862)
"A library is an arsenal of liberty. . YAN AYRTON L. Dutt ( Brazilian junior classical composer & musician , author , poet , free thinker and essayist, )
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- published: 19 Apr 2009
- views: 513
5:04
Jud's Journal: The Man Who Gave Birth to Yankee
Jud's Journal: The Man Who Gave Birth to Yankee.
Transcription:
Well, Robb Sagendorp...
published: 02 Feb 2010
Jud's Journal: The Man Who Gave Birth to Yankee
Jud's Journal: The Man Who Gave Birth to Yankee.
Transcription:
Well, Robb Sagendorph was a complex man. Physically, he was about six foot four, and very slender. He had a very gnarled, lined face: he looked a little like Abraham Lincoln.
He was a very private man in some respects. He always said, "Keep your worries and your indigestion to yourself." That's the old way, you know. He loved politics, local politics: he was a selectman, he was a town moderator. All his life, he was involved with town affairs. And he loved to garden, and he loved, he had animals, in early years, he had animals.
On the other hand, there was a sophistication about him as well. For instance, he was a Harvard graduate, class of '22. He was the editor of the Lampoon. And he worked for his father, my grandfather, who ran Penn Metal Company in Boston. So, after that experience, of working for his father, and not working, coming out, he came up here to Dublin, which was about 1500 people at that time.
And they moved up on the hill, overlooking Monadnock, overlooking the lake, Dublin Lake. And that's where he began "Yankee." And that first issue, of course, as we all know, was September of 1935.
People ask, well, why did he begin it? Well, there's a lot of different reasons, probably. One reason is that he submitted a lot of stories to a lot of different magazines, and nobody published them, so he thought, "Well, I'll start a magazine myself! And I'll publish my own stuff." I think he really had a feeling for New England, however.
I think he loved New England. He felt New England needed a magazine. Yankee's destiny, nowadays, we call it "mission," you have a mission statement, but in those days, it was "destiny," Yankee's destiny was the expression, is the expression, he said, and perhaps indirectly the preservation of our New England culture. And his view was that Yankee, every month, and it was monthly at that point, should try to capture that culture.
He had a wonderful feeling for readers, for New England in itself. I loved the card he sent out when people's subscription expired. His whole attitude was, "Well, if you haven't liked what we've done, if you haven't liked the magazine, I guess we're just going to have to sulk and try harder. And to take your name off our subscription list would be like taking an old friend up to the cemetery on the hill." Well, everybody renewed. They sent handkerchiefs so that we could cry into them.
And he was a bit of a ham, I've seen him give speeches to various places around New England. He had a wind-up moth, so he'd open up this old-looking book, and the wind-up moth would fly out, you know, that type of thing.
And he was very active in getting good writers. Robert Frost wrote for him. I could go through a list of quite prominent people. But he was a skinflint when it came to paying. I remember a guy coming in here, Larry Willard, who did a lot of stories for us. He was a photographer and a writer, which was wonderful.
And he came in, he did a story up in Franconia, he said it's 94 miles, I need expenses, whatever it was, five cents a mile back then, or something. Robb said, "Oh, really? 94, huh?" He hauled out this little wheel that he'd sent away for, and went along the road on a map, all the curves and everything, got to the end of it and read a little thing there that said "89." He said, "It's only 89 miles to Franconia, come on!" I mean, he was a skinflint.
When he had cancer, he didn't have medical treatment, because he was a Christian Scientist, as was his wife, Beatrix. And we all gathered at his house one morning for coffee, and to convince him otherwise. And he said, "Well, I really appreciate what you're trying to do, but, I don't want to have medical treatment now. Just allow me to go down with my flags flying." What could you say? What could you do? And he did die, about six months later.
My mother was his sister, and she called him a funny duck, he called her hairbrained. They never really saw eye-to-eye. But I grew to love the man.
- published: 02 Feb 2010
- views: 52
0:55
Sage recites Stopping by Woods On A Snowy Evening by Robert Frost
Sage learned this Robert Frost poem on a wintry, snowy night a few weeks ago. We finally h...
published: 05 Jan 2010
Sage recites Stopping by Woods On A Snowy Evening by Robert Frost
Sage learned this Robert Frost poem on a wintry, snowy night a few weeks ago. We finally had a chance today to get a recording done.
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
by Robert Frost
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
- published: 05 Jan 2010
- views: 13076
1:44
The Witness Tree by Ian R McLeod
Meadow Arts worked with the award winning novelist and writer Ian R MacLeod and Madley Pri...
published: 29 Mar 2011
The Witness Tree by Ian R McLeod
Meadow Arts worked with the award winning novelist and writer Ian R MacLeod and Madley Primary School on a literacy based workshop exploring the visual and mythical connections of the Witness Tree with Coningsby Hospital.
Here is Ian's own personal response.
I was lucky enough to be introduced to the Witness Tree in the ancient courtyard of Coningsby Hospital in Hereford as part of a literacy project involving Madley School. I think the idea of a poem was already in my mind from some dim recollection of Robert Frost even before I saw the tree itself. Turns out, though, that it's the title of a collection rather than a particular poem. Not that I would ever be foolish enough to compare myself to Frost, but right away there was a sense of a space already waiting to be filled by words.
The Witness Tree's a strange and lovely name for a strange and lovely creation, and the idea of bearing witness, making confession, being heard and perhaps forgiven seemed all the more appropriate when combined with the white, reaching branches of the tree, and the figures who are struggling to emerge, or perhaps being swallowed, by its trunk. Branches are always a bit like fingers in any case, and of course they whisper to each other and stir in the wind.
There's always a sense that every tree has a tale to tell, if we were patient enough to listen. And, perhaps, that the tree itself might hear what we have to say about ourselves if only we could bring ourselves to speak to it from our hearts... Ian R MacLeod www.ianrmacleod.com
You can view Brass Art's artwork at Coningsby Hospital in Hereford (see www.meadowarts.org for more details).
- published: 29 Mar 2011
- views: 197