How I Found Magic: Bread Loaf

How I Found Magic: Bread Loaf

Years and years ago, after dropping my daughter off at the University of Vermont, in Burlington, for a 2-week high school summer debate camp, I went exploring graduate campuses for a return to school for a second master’s degree, this one in literature. I was in the mood for New England. Consulting a Princeton Review to find English programs there, I stumbled onto the Bread Loaf graduate school of English. Bread Loaf, In Vermont’s Green Mountains, was so named for the gently arresting mountain over the next ridge north from the mountaintop campus.

 It is one of Middlebury College’s graduate schools and located at their winter ski campus.  

Robert Frost held court here for years and years, before his death in 1963. His farmhouse is just down the road. 

An hour after leaving Jesse in Burlington, I found the magical, winding road from the town of Middlebury up to the Bread Loaf School of English. The drive brought tears-the rush of water over the rocky Middlebury River, the twisting road up the mountain, the smell of fresh pine and log fires.

At Ripton’s Country Store, I told the clerk I would be back.

           Arriving at the top of the mountain, I pulled over at The Robert Frost Interpretive Forest marker. I got out of my car and wandered a bit. I couldn’t believe it. A man also reading the marker must have thought I was crazy as I babbled my joy. Pilgrimage. 

Finally, Bread Loaf. I pulled into the large grass and gravel lot beyond a giant pine grove. 

Even from a distance, I heard students conversing at wooden tables and rustic Adirondack chairs, set between ochre-colored cottages. Air thick with learning vibes.

I journaled. Very tempting to return. Strong sense I will. I want to be part of this.

Yes, I returned the following summer. Bread Loaf, a 5-summer commitment, gave my life new direction and an acknowledgement of my intellect. My brothers were brilliant scholars. However, being female in my family, at that time, meant going off to college to find a husband. By the time I graduated, though, I was expected to burn my bra. It was confusing. I thrived at Bread Loaf and received one of only a few named Bread Loaf scholarship awards. Prominent literary scholars left their universities to come teach at Bread Loaf in the summer in intimate ‘barn’ classrooms.  

The barn in winter Sandy LeGault.

Dear JGL, a professor at George Washington University during the regular academic year, had nominated me:

“Susan has turned out to be one of those rare and unexpected gifts to the seminar—an amused and amusing student who has been completely absorbed in the work and whose writing has moved from strength to strength. She was always prepared and read widely, with avid interest. She wrote lucidly and with sophistication. Her final paper on Marriage as Dance in Virginia Woolf’s writing was lively and original, occasionally threatening chaos, and yet finally righting itself; ambitious (she drew on a wide range of critics and theorists) and yet thoroughly down to earth. These words also describe her.”

Classes, intense reading, and research papers, stimulating conversation with like-minded scholars. Idyllic nights of study. Mountain breezes. Soul replenished..    

A community of sun-glassed summer scholars.

 Tricia, on the left was at Oxford the same summer as I and we traveled together throughout Wales at the end of term. I just had to visit Wordsworth’s Tintern Abbey.

Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13, 1798.

Five years have past; five summers, with the length

Of five long winters! and again I hear

These waters, rolling from their mountain-springs

With a soft inland murmur.—Once again

Do I behold these steep and lofty cliffs,

That on a wild secluded scene impress

Thoughts of more deep seclusion; and connect

The landscape with the quiet of the sky.

The day is come when I again repose

Here, under this dark sycamore, and view

These plots of cottage-ground, these orchard-tufts,

Which at this season, with their unripe fruits,

Are clad in one green hue, and lose themselves

‘Mid groves and copses. Once again I see

These hedge-rows, hardly hedge-rows, little lines

Of sportive wood run wild: these pastoral farms,

Green to the very door; and wreaths of smoke

Sent up, in silence, from among the trees!

These lines could be about returning to Bread Loaf. And after five summers, I did it!

Thank you, Bread Loaf.
Magic.