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Elected Friends: Robert Frost & Edward Thomas To One Another
 
 
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Elected Friends: Robert Frost & Edward Thomas To One Another [Hardcover]

Matthew Spencer (Author), Christopher Ricks (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 17, 2004
Robert Frost and Edward Thomas met in a bookshop in London in 1913. During the next four years, the two writers—Frost, an unknown poet who had sold his farm in New Hampshire in order to take his family to England for one last gamble on poetry and Thomas, a sad literary journalist—formed the most important friendship between poets since that of Wordsworth and Coleridge. Their friendship only ended with Thomas' death in Arras, France, a casualty of the First World War.

The story of Edward Thomas' turn to poetry, in fact, has been dominated by the account of Robert Frost's injunction: to break his existing prose into lines, bringing his musical cadence and his direct speaking voice into conversation with formal prosody. Thomas himself had already championed Frost's own early work: These poems are revolutionary because they lack the exaggeration of rhetoric.... Their language is free from the poetical words and forms that are the chief material of the secondary poets. The metre avoids not only old fashioned pomp and sweetness, but the later fashion also of discord and fuss. In fact the medium is common speech.... Mr. Frost has, in fact, gone back, as Whitman and as Wordsworth went back, through the paraphernalia of poetry into poetry once again.

This book presents for the first time the full record, arranged chronologically, of what the poets wrote to, for, and about one another—their letters, poems, and Thomas' review of Frost's first two books. They reveal a warmth and charm that give us the key to the relationship between Frost and Thomas.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Matthew Spencer

Matthew Spencer is currently working towards a master's degree in Editorial Studies at Boston University's Editorial Institute. He earned his bachelor's degree in literature from Boston University in 2002.


Michael Hofmann

Michael Hofmann has translated Bertolt Brecht, Joseph Roth, Patrick S, Herta Mueller, and Franz Kafka. He won the Translators' Association's Schlegel-Tieck Prize twice in 1988 for his adaptation of The Double Bass by Patrick S (1987), and in 1993 for his rendering of Wolfgang Koeppen's Death in Rome (1992). In 1999 he won the PEN/Book of the Month Club Translation Prize for The String of Pearls. His translation of his father's novel The Film Explainer, by Gert Hofmann, won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize in 1995. He has written and translated more than 35 books, winning eight awards for his translations and his poetry.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 216 pages
  • Publisher: Other Press (February 17, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590510836
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590510834
  • Product Dimensions: 5.7 x 1 x 8.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.7 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,727,516 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars No Service to an Important Friendship, June 22, 2004
By 
James Armstrong (Placentia, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Elected Friends: Robert Frost & Edward Thomas To One Another (Hardcover)
Too few Americans know that Frost had his first success as a poet in England, and that the English poet and literary journalist Edward Thomas contributed to that success.
Frost called Thomas "the only brother I ever had." The two had many things in common, and they formed a close friendship from their first meeting in October 1913 until Thomas was killed in battle in France in April 1917. They took long walks together while Frost was living in Gloucestershire in 1914, and both wrote poems about this--Frost's "Iris by Night" and Thomas's "The sun used to shine."
Thomas helped Frost refine his theories of "the sound of sense" and wrote reviews praising his second book, North of Boston. Frost prompted Thomas to discover his own poetic talent, and Thomas wrote over 140 poems in about two years, some of which--like "I Remember Adlestrop"--were loved and learned by generations of English schoolchildren.
So this assembly of the surviving correspondence between the two offers readers some insight into the nature of the friendship, but holds disappointments as well. The editor, Matthew Spencer, offers no explanation for the surprising six-to-one imbalance of the letters in favor of Thomas, though available sources, including some in his bibliography, indicate that Thomas burned most of his correspondence before going to France. Nor does he provide an index, though the letters contain numerous references to well-known writers of the time. Spencer does outline the circumstances that led Frost to England, but he skips over the publication of Frost's first book, A Boy's Will. His account of Thomas's years of freelancing under a cloud of depression and the brief flourishing of his friendship with Frost may be a useful review for readers already acquainted with the story, but will hardly help newcomers understand the fragmented version of it in the letters.
Michael Hofmann's Foreword and Christopher Ricks's Afterword might have provided helpful insight into the friendship, but these two writers choose instead to ride their own hobby-horses. Hofmann takes off on a weird psychosexual interpretation of the friendship, and Ricks entertains himself with a series of rhapsodies on the theme of Anglo-American rivalry, all the while noting that it doesn't apply to Frost and Thomas!
There are much better sources for understanding the Frost-Thomas friendship, including Edward Thomas: The Last Four Years by Eleanor Farjeon and "The Only Begetter," a chapter in John Evangelist Walsh's Into My Own.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary story, October 1, 2009
By 
Janet E. Koch "janetkochhladky" (South Windsor, CT United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Elected Friends: Robert Frost & Edward Thomas To One Another (Hardcover)
What a psychic link across the Pond, across the ages, across the vale of death ...
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