New Hampshire, A Poem; with Notes and Grace Notes

audiobook

New Hampshire, A Poem; with Notes and Grace Notes

by Robert Frost

EN·~1 hours·47 chapters

Chapters

47 total
1

NEW HAMPSHIRE A POEM WITH NOTES AND GRACE NOTES BY ROBERT FROST WITH WOODCUTS BY J. J. LANKES PUBLISHED BY HENRY HOLT & COMPANY: NEW YORK: MCMXXIII

0:25
2

NEW HAMPSHIRE

17:59
3

A STAR IN A STONE-BOAT (For Lincoln MacVeagh)

2:34
4

THE CENSUS-TAKER

2:52
5

THE STAR-SPLITTER

4:26
6

MAPLE

7:41
7

THE AXE-HELVE

4:39
8

THE GRINDSTONE

3:19
9

PAUL’S WIFE

7:02
10

WILD GRAPES

4:40

Description

A wandering narrator stitches together a series of vivid encounters—southerners, Arkansans, Californians, and fellow poets—each offering a witty, off‑beat snapshot of life and attitudes toward work, trade, and the landscape. Through a rhythm that feels part conversation, part lyrical riff, the poem paints New Hampshire as a mosaic of stubborn pride, quiet histories, and quirky ambition, all while the speaker’s own voice drifts between satire and sincere curiosity.

Interspersed with thoughtful notes and delicate woodcut illustrations, the work balances playful observation with deeper reflections on regional identity, the pull of commerce, and the lingering echo of the state’s early settlers. Listeners will find a rich tapestry of characters and ideas that feels both rooted in place and universally resonant, inviting you to linger on each line and consider what makes a community—and its stories—truly unforgettable.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (104K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Al Haines, Mark Akrigg, Stephen Hutcheson & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net

Release date

2019-01-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Frost

Robert Frost

1874–1963

A master of plainspoken poetry, this American writer turned rural New England scenes into unforgettable reflections on choice, nature, loneliness, and human character. His poems feel approachable at first glance, then linger with surprising depth.

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