Op/Ed Poetry
Poetry: Did you know Frost, I asked you
Wasn’t he the guy who wrote poetry
up in Ripton, you said,
when I asked you, if you knew
Frost. If you ever bumped into him.
On one of his trips down the mountain.
Driving through East Middlebury.
Where everyone knows everybody.
It’s likely even a bard would stop
for a drink at the Waybury.
Give the impression he was local
enough. Take a few lines he could use
back to his cabin. Up there in the cathedral
of pines Hazlett Upson planted.
Famous around here, back then, across
the nation. For his Saturday Evening Post
Alexander Botts Tractor Stories. And his
house, the Dragon’s Den, just below
Bread Loaf’s Inn, The fields Stafford
Dragon mowed for Frost and him.
Frost telling a reporter once, when he was
asked how his poems sounded so natural,
that he got his best lines from a Dragon
in Ripton, Vermont. Giving in to saying
our state’s name, to locate where in the world
Ripton is. Saying, the word he used when
reading, reciting one of his verses. Wanting,
it seems, to want us to believe he was one
of the guys, stopping after work to raise a glass,
toasting his horse. Shaking, he would write,
“his harness bells.” Dusting the snow off.
Filling in his tracks. Making it hard to know
if they were leaving or coming back to the village.
Its country store. Or waiting for the snow
to stop. Before starting out again, Frost might
have told you, where they had to go.
Gary Margolis
Cornwall
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