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  1. May 27, 2016 · Robert Frost wrote “The Road Not Taken” as a joke for a friend, the poet Edward Thomas. When they went walking together, Thomas was chronically indecisive about which road they ought to take and—in retrospect—often lamented that they should, in fact, have taken the other one.

  2. Thomas and Frost became close friends and took many walks together. One day, as they were walking together, they came across two roads. Thomas was indecisive about which road to take, and in retrospect often lamented that they should have taken the other one.

  3. May 3, 2021 · In 1932, unsure whether he’d ever return to New England, Robert Frost’s son Carol began hunting up possible buyers for his farm in South Shaftsbury, Vermont. (The property was remarkable for its 18th-century manse, the “Stone House,” now owned by Bennington College.)

  4. Feb 16, 2017 · Frost found Thomas to be an indecisive man, and after he’d written ‘The Road Not Taken’ but before it was published, he sent it to Thomas, whose indecisiveness even extended to uncertainty over whether to follow Frost to the United States or to enlist in the army and go and fight in France.

  5. In 1916, almost 20 years after he had dropped out of Harvard, he was invited to deliver the Phi Beta Kappa poem at Harvard’s Commencement—a perfect emblem of his reversal of fortune, and a justification for his unconventional career. In a letter to Untermeyer in May 1916, Frost described himself jokily but quite accurately: “Chief ...

  6. Feb 15, 2014 · When Thompson went back to Princeton he wrote me a long letter in which he virtually accused Frost of having been sole cause of the tragedies in Frost’s family, including the suicide of his...

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  8. Aug 1, 2011 · Over at The Guardian, Matthew Hollis wrote a detailed, fascinating feature on the friendship of Robert Frost and Edward Thomas that sheds light on the genesis and influence of Frost's "The Road Not Taken," a poem that helped seal Frost's legacy and that, oddly, adorns dorm walls to this day.

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