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Stilling read a reference to an "unpublished poem about the war which has not been reprinted," in a 1947 letter by Frederick Melcher, a friend and supporter of Frost, who lived from 1874 to 1963.
And I always - as soon as I read this new poem, "Nothing New," by Frost, I thought it's essentially a version of "Dust Of Snow," which I think he wrote the following year. That poem stays in my brain.
It’s the kind of thing most scholars only dream of. Robert Stilling, a graduate student at the University of Virginia, recently discovered an unpublished poem by Robert Frost, while browsing through ...
And I always - as soon as I read this new poem, "Nothing New," by Frost, I thought it's essentially a version of "Dust Of Snow," which I think he wrote the following year. That poem stays in my brain.
And I always - as soon as I read this new poem, "Nothing New," by Frost, I thought it's essentially a version of "Dust Of Snow," which I think he wrote the following year. That poem stays in my brain.
And I always - as soon as I read this new poem, "Nothing New," by Frost, I thought it's essentially a version of "Dust Of Snow," which I think he wrote the following year. That poem stays in my brain.