Please note: This audiobook has been created using AI voice. Robert Frost published New Hampshire, his fourth book of poetry, in 1923. The centerpiece is the long poem "New Hampshire," an ode to the state. Endnotes on its lines point to shorter poems in the "Notes" section, and the book is capped with "Grace Notes," a series of short lyricssome of which are among Frost's most famous works. The poems are each a meditative brushstroke of Americana, presented in Frost's trademark plainspoken but carefullyconsidered verse. The collection went on to win the 1924 Pulitzer prize for poetry, the first of four Frost would go on to receive. Included in this book is "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," "Fire and Ice," and "Nothing Gold Can Stay."