Robert Frost (1874тАУ1963) was the most celebrated poet in America for most of the twentieth century. Although chiefly associated with the life and landscapes of New England, his work embodies penetrating and often dark explorations of universal themes.
New Hampshire features FrostтАЩs meditations on rural life, love, and death, delivered in the voice of a soft-spoken New Englander. Critics have long marveled at the poetтАЩs gift for capturing the speech of the regionтАЩs natives and his realistic evocations of the areaтАЩs landscapes. This compilation first published in 1923 earned Frost the first of his four Pulitzer Prizes, and includes several of his best-known poems: тАЬStopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,тАЭ тАЬNothing Gold Can Stay,тАЭ and тАЬFire and IceтАЭ as well as verse based on such traditional songs as тАЬI Will Sing You One-O.тАЭ
Robert Frost (1874-1963) lived on a farm in Franconia, New Hampshire for most of his life and is one of America's most beloved poets.