Nothing New,” which the American poet wrote in 1918, is published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
The universe could end not with a bang, but a whimper known as “false vacuum decay.” In a new study, scientists leveraged the ...
A recently discovered poem, written in 1918 and published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
Gordon Clapp, an Emmy winner for “NYPD Blue,” wanders amiably, almost absent-mindedly, onto the Roberts Studio stage as onetime poet laureate Robert Frost in “Robert Frost: This Verse ...
ROBERT Frost has been discovering America all his life. He has also been discovering the world; and since he is a really wise poet, the one thing has been the same thing as the other. He is more ...
A reporter once asked Robert Frost what event most influenced his life. “Well, when I was 12 I worked in a little shoe shop, ...
Robert Frost, winner of four Pulitzer prizes, died in his sleep early yesterday morning at the age of 88 in Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Frost, who was an honorary associate of Adams House from ...
Invoking Emily Dickinson, Phillis Wheatley, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Sam Cornish and Robert Frost, Gov. Maura Healey on ...
Peter Saracino, a veteran community theater performer, will portray poet Robert Frost in a free performance at the Geneva History Museum on Saturday, March 1, 2025, at 2:00 p.m. The event, titled In ...
These lines come from Robert Frost’s brief essay “The Prerequisites,” on first encountering and not understanding — not fully — an Emerson poem. Some 50 years later, “the poem turned ...