Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Remarks at Amherst College on the Arts at the Presidential Convocation and Groundbreaking for the Robert Frost Library is a speech delivered by United States President John F. Kennedy about the arts and liberal education in honor of the American poet Robert Frost to the students and faculty of Amherst College, a liberal arts college in Amherst, Massachusetts, on October 26, 1963.
"Nothing Gold Can Stay" is a short poem written by Robert Frost in 1923 and published in The Yale Review in October of that year. It was later published in the collection New Hampshire (1923), [1] which earned Frost the 1924 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. The poem lapsed into public domain in 2019. [2]
New Hampshire is a 1923 poetry collection by Robert Frost, which won the 1924 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. [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]
Despite these losses, Frost continued to work on his poetry and eventually fell in love with his secretary Kay Marrison, who became the primary inspiration of the love poems in this collection. This collection is the last of Frost's books that demonstrates the seamless lyric quality of his earlier poems.
October 2020 was the snowiest October on record in Spokane, Washington, with a record 7.5 inches (19 cm) falling there. [152] Great Falls, Montana also saw their snowiest October on record, [153] as did Boston. [154] In Mankato, Minnesota a high temperature of 28 °F (−2 °C) made it the coldest October high temperature in the town. [155]
Following its success, Henry Holt and Company republished Frost's first book in the United States, A Boy's Will, in 1915. The New York Times said in a review, "In republishing his first book after his second, Mr. Robert Frost has undertaken the difficult task of competing with himself." [1]
Leiber's novelette "A Bit of the Dark World" took the cover of the February 1962 issue of Fantastic Leiber's "The Snowbank Orbit" was the cover story for the September 1962 issue of If "The 64-Square Madhouse" "The Big Engine" (shortened revision of "You're All Alone") "A Bit of the Dark World" "The Creature from Cleveland Depths" aka "The Lone ...
Stuart Kelly of The Scotsman commented "Like the TV version, there is an unsettling balance between gothic horror and slapstick comedy. One very minor character in the original, the vampish Lana – rather winkingly referred to as having “the eternal appeal of the ‘dark feminine’ archetype” – gets a quick cameo on the arm of “a notorious resident of a certain eponymous tower on ...