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🗓️ 26 February 2024
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Edwin Arlington Robinson was born in Head Tide, Maine on December 22, 1869 (the same year as W. B. Yeats). His family moved to Gardiner, Maine, in 1870, which renamed “Tilbury Town,” became the backdrop for many of Robinson’s poems. Robinson described his childhood as stark and unhappy; he once wrote in a letter to Amy Lowell that he remembered wondering why he had been born at the age of six. After high school, Robinson spent two years studying at Harvard University as a special student and his first poems were published in the Harvard Advocate.
Robinson privately printed and released his first volume of poetry, The Torrent and the Night Before, in 1896 at his own expense; this collection was extensively revised and published in 1897 as The Children of the Night. Unable to make a living by writing, he got a job as an inspector for the New York City subway system. In 1902, he published Captain Craig and Other Poems. This work received little attention until President Theodore Roosevelt wrote a magazine article praising it and Robinson. Roosevelt also offered Robinson a sinecure in a U.S. Customs House, a job he held from 1905 to 1910. Robinson dedicated his next work, The Town Down the River (1910), to Roosevelt.
Robinson’s first major success was The Man Against the Sky (1916). He also composed a trilogy based on Arthurian legends: Merlin (1917), Lancelot (1920), and Tristram (1927), which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1928. Robinson was also awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his Collected Poems (1921) in 1922 and The Man Who Died Twice (1924) in 1925. For the last twenty-five years of his life, Robinson spent his summers at the MacDowell Colony of artists and musicians in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Robinson never married and led a notoriously solitary lifestyle. He died in New York City on April 6, 1935.
-bio via Academy of American Poets
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome back to the Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios. |
0:05.0 | I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Monday, February 26, 2004. |
0:10.8 | Today's poem is by Edwin Arlington Robinson, who was one of the most successful and prolific poets of the early 20th century. In fact, he was the first person to |
0:24.6 | be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for a collection of poetry and even had a U.S. president as his patron |
0:32.8 | at one point. It's surprising then and sad that today Robinson is remembered for just a handful of his poems. |
0:46.4 | Minivercheevi, maybe his best known poem about a lackluster fellow who laments that he was not born in an earlier age, |
0:57.9 | maybe an age of knights and chivalry where great deeds were possible for people like him. |
1:04.7 | Instead, he sits in a bar and drinks away his sorrows. |
1:10.8 | Or Richard Corey, the poem that I will be reading today, |
1:15.6 | which owes some of its continuing popularity and fame to |
1:20.6 | Simon and Garfunkel, who turned it into a hit song in 1966. |
1:26.6 | A word of warning, maybe a spoiler alert, song in 1966. |
1:29.6 | A word of warning, |
1:30.9 | maybe a spoiler alert, |
1:32.9 | this poem does end with a suicide. |
1:35.4 | And on that happy note, |
1:37.7 | here is Richard |
1:39.0 | Corey. I'll read it once |
1:40.4 | for a few words and then |
1:42.8 | read it one more time. |
1:55.5 | Whenever Richard Corey went downtown, we people on the pavement looked at him. |
2:03.3 | He was a gentleman from soul to crown, clean, favored, and imperially slim. And he was always quietly arrayed, and he was always human when he talked. |
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