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Stopping By Woods

Daljit Nagra selects β€˜Stopping By Woods’ by Robert Frost. Kenneth Steven visits Vermont to trace its origins. From 2011.

Poet Daljit Nagra revisits the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ's radio poetry archive and selects β€˜Stopping By Woods’ by Robert Frost.

The poem 'Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening' was written about nightfall on the shortest day of the year, though it was actually put to paper at dawn on June 21st, 1922 - the longest day. This has always puzzled Kenneth Steven, a poet captivated by Robert Frost's seemingly effortless mastery of rhyme, metre, language and imagery.

Kenneth Steven visits the poet's home in Shaftesbury, Vermont, now a museum. He talks to the curator there, Carole Thompson, and a pair of Frost scholars, Lea Newman and David Sanders, and he walks the very woods that are possibly evoked by the horseman who pauses to watch the snow settle, despite having "promises to keep/And miles to go before I sleep".

He makes a pilgrimage to Frost's final resting place in a New England cemetery - his gravestone covered in glinting pennies left by fellow pilgrims - and he reveals compelling new insights into the origins and impact of the poem which Frost himself considered his "best bid for remembrance".

Producer: Alan Hall

A Falling Tree production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 first broadcast in December 2011.

30 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Sun 27 Dec 2020 12:00
  • Sun 27 Dec 2020 17:00
  • Mon 28 Dec 2020 05:00