Davis Square poet Ed Meek writes about a Robert Frost moment when he was at the famed literary retreat Breadloaf. This poem is included in his new collection of poetry Spy Pond.
Frost Country
From Breadloaf, I jog downhill towards town.
I pass Wayside: site of the cabin where Frost
spent summers writing poems. It’s a stone’s throw
from the Frost House on Frost Road. There,
a yellow bus unloads middle school kids,
happy to break from school. I imagine
the old poet’s craggy head in the clouds.
Then I see a sign for the Frost Interpretive Trail.
I weave through the parking lot past a Camry
and a mini-van. On the trail poems on plaques
intersperse with verses carved in wood.
Caught between delight and wisdom, I hesitate
at the fork for “The Road Not Taken.”
Then I realize, it’s a loop!
It doesn’t make any difference
which path you choose. You always end up
back in the parking lot
with the Camry or the min-van!
Well, I have to get back for lunch.
No stopping by woods for me.
I’m hungry and earth
is the right place for lunch.
— Ed Meek
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