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  1. Publisher. Henry Holt. Preceded by. North of Boston (1914) Followed by. Selected Poems (1923) Mountain Interval is a 1916 poetry collection written by American poet Robert Frost. Published by Henry Holt, it is Frost's third poetic volume.

    • Robert Frost
    • Poetry collection
    • 1916
    • 1916
  2. Jul 7, 2009 · Robert Frost’s. North of Boston. Mountain Interval. New Edition, with Portrait. A Boy’s Will . Carl Sandburg’s. Cornhuskers. Chicago Poems . Lew Sarrett’s. Many Many Moons . Louis Untermeyer’s. These Times---- and Other Poets. Poems of Heinrich Heine (Translated) The New Era in American Poetry . Margaret Widdemer’s. The Old Road to ...

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  4. Jul 7, 2009 · 9 by Robert Frost. Mountain Interval by Robert Frost. Read now or download (free!) Choose how to read this book Url ... Frost, Robert, 1874-1963: Title: Mountain Interval

  5. Cover of Mountain Interval, along with the page containing "The Road Not Taken". " The Road Not Taken " is a narrative poem by Robert Frost, first published in the August 1915 issue of the Atlantic Monthly, [1] and later published as the first poem in the 1916 poetry collection, Mountain Interval. Its central theme is the divergence of paths ...

  6. Mountain Interval by Robert Frost (1916/1920) [Edition of 1920.] Contents. ... There is a sort of tunnel in the frost More like a tunnel than a hole—way down

  7. Mountain Interval. by James Ross Macdonald. A sense of the future as fundamentally circumscribed by the choices of the past runs through Mountain Interval ( 1916 ), Robert Frost ’s third published poetry collection. The theme is announced and explored in the collection’s first and most famous poem, “The Road Not Taken,” in which Frost ...

  8. Mar 24, 2011 · A Boy’s Will (1914) established Robert Frost’s reputation, but Mountain Interval (1916) maintained that reputation and enhanced it. The book contains four commonly acknowledged masterpieces (“The Road Not Taken,” “Birches,”“Out, Out--,” “The Oven Bird”) and a few other popular favorites, such as the amiable “Time to Talk” (a parable of work and friendship), “Mr. Brown ...

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