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"Birches" is a poem by American poet Robert Frost. First published in the August 1915 issue of The Atlantic Monthly together with " The Road Not Taken " and "The Sound of Trees" as "A Group of Poems".
"Birches" "Pea Brush" "Putting in the Seed" "A Time to Talk" "The Cow in Apple Time" "An Encounter" "Range-Finding" "Cranberries at Noon" "The Hill Wife" "The Bonfire" "A Girl's Garden" "Locked Out" "The Last Word of a Blue Bird" "Out, Out-" "Brown's Descent, or the Willy-nilly Slide" "The Gum-Gatherer" "The Line-Gang" "The Vanishing Red" "Snow ...
Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again. is a feminist play by Alice Birch, commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company and first performed in 2014. The play had its off-Broadway premiere in 2016.
"Birches" "Pea Brush" "Putting in the Seed" "A Time to Talk" "The Cow in Apple Time" "The Encounter" "Range-Finding" "The Hill Wife" "The Bonfire" "A Girl's Garden" "Locked Out" "The Last Word of a Blue Bird" "Out, Out—" "Brown's Descent, or the Willy-nilly Slide" "The Gum-Gatherer" "The Line-Gang" "The Vanishing Red" "Snow" "The Sound of ...
Frost composed the poem at his farm in Derry, New Hampshire; his home from 1901 to 1911 "Mending Wall" is a poem by Robert Frost.It opens Robert's second collection of poetry, North of Boston, [1] published in 1914 by David Nutt, and has become "one of the most anthologized and analyzed poems in modern literature".
"After Apple-Picking" is a poem by American poet Robert Frost. It was published in 1914 in North of Boston, Frost's second poetry collection. [1] The poem, 42 lines in length, does not strictly follow a particular form (instead consisting of mixed iambs), nor does it follow a standard rhyme scheme.
"The Death of the Hired Man" is a long poem primarily concerning a conversation, over a short time period in a single evening, between a farmer (Warren) and his wife (Mary) about what to do with an ex-employee named Silas, who helped with haymaking and left the farm at an inappropriate time after being offered "pocket money," now making his return during winter looking like "a miserable sight ...
A Birch Grove is a landscape by the Russian artist Arkhip Kuindzhi (1842–1910), completed in 1879. It is kept in the State Tretyakov Gallery (inventory 882). The size of the painting is 97×181 cm. [1] [2] The canvas depicts birch trees growing in a sunny forest clearing. [3]