A fond memory of the poet.
The Holden Frost House sits just north of Cannon Mountain, with views of its trails and majestic Franconia Notch and Lafayette Mountain. It sits alone atop a hill, looking down on sweeping fields
Vermont and New Hampshire aren’t so similar anymore.
In his poem “Nyla Brook,” Robert Frost wrote, “We love the things we love for what they are.” A simple brook returning after the winter cold, with quiet waters and a new life, brought joy to those who loved it, including Frost. Can we find love and meaning simply by observing the world around us? I believe we can.
Frost's most famous poem is misread as a celebration of American nonconformists, writes SU professor. To true nonconformists, it would have evoked the era's racial violence.
First presented in 1930, the medal is named for Robert Frost and has been given to Wallace Stevens, Allen Ginsberg and Adrienne Rich among others.
This production includes three stories by noted New England authors: “A White Heron” by South Berwick, Maine's Sarah Orne Jewett, “Farmer Eli's Vacation” by Hampton Falls, NH's Alice Brown and “The Star-Splitter” by Robert Frost.
Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.” It is the first line of Robert Frost’s poem, “Mending Wall.” In the poem, Frost reflects on the stone walls between neighbors
I was surprised that, in her review of a new book on Robert Frost, Abigail Deutsch refers to the poet as a “terrifying man” (Books, Feb. 22). That doesn’t track with my own experience.