Dear List,
Matthew Roth sent me a
wonderful link (off List), through which I learned that Frost's
poem about "eavesdropping" was published in the fifties. However, Matt
notes that he doesn't see "anything
here in terms of inspiration--just two poets latching onto the same
metaphor."
Thank you, Matt, for the helpful information and
links.
I copied its text
from the related page, presenting the poem which, as I think,
has been referenced by Kinbote (not by Shade, though), that master
eavesdropper.
Here it is:
"Cabin in the Clearing,A,
written about August 1950, was Frost's Christmas poem and was first published
with a dedication to Frost's friend and publisher Alfred Edwards and appears in
Frost's last collection, In the Clearing (1962), lending the collection
its title.
Reginald Cook notes that Frost once described
the poem as being "about knowing ourselves," a point that Richard Wilbur raises
in his review of In the Clearing in the 25 March 1962 New York Herald
Tribune. According to Linda Wagner, Wilbur refers to "A Cabin in the
Clearing" as a "charming" conversation between the chimney smoke and garden
mist, the result of which is a philosophical "clearing": " a little area of
human coherence" and "clarification". As the smoke and mist eavesdrop on the
conversation between the couple in the cabin, they realize, however, that the
people in the cabin have not clarified their existence, but rather, through
their talk and unrest, they continue to probe the mystery of who and where they
are. Any clarification the people acquire, then, is gradual, gained
through their continual learning and by asking "anyone there is to ask" and
driven by their "fond faith" that "accumulated fact/ Will of itself take fire
and light the world up."... The value of this continual searching is a theme
that Frost seems to keep returning to and one that also informs earlier poems
such as "Neither Out Far Nor in Deep."...
My own search led me to "Frost, Collected Poems, Prose,& Plays" (The
Library of America). Its chronology only dates "A Cabin..." as of 1962, its
publication coincident with the poet's birthday, March 26. I thought of my
elaborate story about the two repetitive "bright" of Kinbote's ramblings
almost as a prank (but I did enjoy the contrast between Frost's gnostic "kenome"
and Shade's hope in a "web of sense" and an extraneous "plexed artistry" (
a Gnostic "pleroma"?), the two having arisen almost at the same time: a
perfect "synchronicity" ( my vision is here in contrast to Roth's "just two
poets latching onto the same metaphor.").
Also in 1962 Frost went to the Soviet Union and met Premier
Nikita Kruschev, also "Anna Akhmatova, Yevgeny Yevtuschenko, and
Andrei Voznensensky, as well as Andrei Tvardovsky..." Shade, despite
his roots in New Hampshire, could never aspire to Frost's political
significance and his place as the eldest, the heir, the "first-born"
of Shade's (fictional) lineage.
For the heck of it, I read Frost's chronology for items about
the year of 1959. I found out that Frost confessed he
felt nervous to address the audience, present at his 85th birthday banquet,
because of his predecessor's speech. Lionel Trilling "had remarked: 'The
universe that he conceives is a terrifying universe... Read "Neither Out Far Nor
In Deep", which often seems to me the most perfect poem of our time, and see if
you are warmed by anything in it except the energy with which emptiness is
perceived'."
Anyway, it is just possible that Nabokov had read Frost's 1950 Christmas
Poem sometime before he had Kinbote pen his commentaries to Shade's
"stillicide"...