Frost Bite
A recently discovered poem by Robert Frost has brought fameand controversyto an English student
- By W. Andrew Ewell
- Smithsonian.com, March 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The exhibit, "Making it Probable: The Robert Frost and Frederic G. Melcher Collection," explores the relationship between those two close friends, focusing on how Melcher, acting as a one-man public relations department, catapulted Frost from successful poet to national treasure. The discovery of "War Thoughts at Home" is significant because it exposes a political side of Frost not often seen in his ostensibly local—that is, New England-centric—poetry, but Stilling would like just as much to demonstrate how the celebrity of America's best-loved poet was no accident—that, in fact, it was carefully crafted from start to finish.
The same cannot be said of Stilling's stint in the spotlight. The young scholar calls his recent fame unintentional and a bit unnerving. In his estimation, the value of the discovery and his role in it have yet to be determined and will depend greatly on what he continues to do with his research. Simply put, his career is just beginning, and he is not ready to be categorized strictly as a "Frost scholar."
"A 'Frost scholar' is a rather nice thing to be," says Stilling. "I just happen to have a number of other interests, as most 'Frost scholars' surely do, and it's way too soon to know whom or what I'll be spending my time working on in the next few years."
To the question, "Are there significant disadvantages to your present fame?" Vladimir Nabokov once said, "Lolita is famous, not I." For Stilling, the only foreseeable disadvantage to his present fame is that he might be pigeon-holed as a single-author scholar, but Stilling maintains humbly that it is indeed Frost who is and will always be famous, not he.
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