New Hampshire (collection)
New Hampshire is a 1923 Pulitzer Prize-winning volume of poems written by Robert Frost.[1] The book included several of Frost's most well-known poems, including "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening",[2] "Nothing Gold Can Stay"[3] and "Fire and Ice".[4] Illustrations for the collection were provided by Frost's friend, woodcut artist J. J. Lankes.[2]
Poems
- New Hampshire
- A Star in a Stone-Boat
- The Census-Taker
- The Star-Splitter
- Maple
- Where's my Hat?
- The Ax-Helve
- The Grindstone
- The Grinderman
- Paul's Wife
- Gordon Brown
- Wild Grapes
- Place for a Third
- Two Witches
- An Empty Threat
- A Fountain, a Wine Bottle, a Donkey's Ears, a Garbage can, Five barrels of Coal, a Broken Clock, a Burnt Hat and Some Books
- I Will Sing You One-O
- The consumed hat
- The exploding barrel
- Fragmentary Blue
- Fire and Ice
- In a Disused Graveyard
- Dust of Snow
- To E.T.
- And then I sat and grew a tail
- Nothing Gold Can Stay
- The Runaway
- The Aim Was Song
- Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
- For Once, Then, Something
- She was like chewing glass
- Blue-Butterfly Day
- The Onset
- To Earthward
- Good-by and Keep Cold
- Two Look at Two
- Not to Keep
- A Brook in the City
- The Kitchen Chimney
- Looking for a Sunset Bird in Winter
- A Boundless Moment
- Evening in a Sugar Orchard
- Gathering Leaves
- The Valley's Singing Day
- Misgiving
- A Hillside Thaw
- Plowmen
- On a Tree Fallen Across the Road
- Our Singing Strength
- The Lockless Door
- The crushed face
- The Need of Being Versed in Country Things
- My Butterfly
References
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