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Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both... ........................................................ ........................................................ I took the one last travelled by and that has made all the difference Dois caminhos divergiam num bosque de outono E, que pena, não pude seguir por ambos............. ............................................................................. ............................................................................ Tomei o menos trilhado, e isso fez toda a diferença.

Early Frost

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In the early fall of 1912, a blandly handsome, tousle-headed American schoolteacher arrived in London. Nearing 40, coming without introduction or much of a plan — except, as he later confessed, “to write and be poor” — he was making a last attempt to write himself into poetry. It would have taken mad willfulness to drag his wife and four children out of their ­settled New Hampshire life in a quixotic assault on the London literary scene. Still, he was soon spending a candlelit evening with Yeats in the poet’s curtained rooms, having come to the attention of that “stormy petrel” Ezra Pound, who lauded him in reviews back home. Little more than two years later, the schoolteacher sailed back, having published his first two books , “A Boy’s Will” (1913) and “North of Boston” (1914). He had become Robert Frost. The modernists remade American poetry in less than a decade, but like the Romantics they were less a group than a scatter of ill-favored and sometimes ill-tem