Download here: http://gg.gg/o8329
William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) – born in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England and nicknamed “The Bard”, and was an English poet and playwright. In his lifetime he wrote 38 plays, 2 narrative poems, 154 sonnets and many other poems. He was regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and he is still revered to date; inspiring festivals and special events. Some of his famous works include Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet, and Macbeth among many others.
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Printable
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Free
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines List
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Examples
*’The very best I’ve ever read, my favorite thing in all world literature (and that includes all the heavy classics) is a novelette called Calumet K by Merwin-Webster,’ Rand wrote in 1945.
*Inappropriate The list (including its title or description) facilitates illegal activity, or contains hate speech or ad hominem attacks on a fellow Goodreads member or author. Spam or Self-Promotional The list is spam or self-promotional. Incorrect Book The list contains an incorrect book (please specify the title of the book).
*This page is dedicated to the Contemporary American Poets and Poems. The poets listed below were either born in America or else published much of their poetry while living in that country.
*Writers create written works in a wide range of literary genres with many writers working across genres. Writers can be broadly classified as poets, novelists, journalists, critics, editors, lyricists, playwrights, historians, and biographers. Browse this section to learn about the life and works of famous writers from across the world.
Mark Twain (1835 – 1910) – born Samuel Langhorne Clemens, he went by the pen name of Mark Twain and was an American writer. He is most known for his novels The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court among others. He has been named “the father of American literature”.Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Printable
Jane Austen (1775 – 1817) – was an English novelist. She is most famous for her novels, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, and Emma being her most famous novels; with two others published after her death and one of which she never completed before her death. Three of her novels have been made into Hollywood movies.Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Free
A list of all authors featured at American Literature, organized alphabetically by last name (in rows, left to right) so that you can find your favorite authors’ books, stories, poems and essays quickly and easily.
The Bronte sisters: Charlotte Bronte (1816 – 1855), Emily (1818 – 1848), Anne (1820 – 1849) – were all English writers in the 1840s and 1850s. They started as poets under pseudonyms in 1846 but then they all wrote a novel each: Jane Eyre (Charlotte Bronte), Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte), Agnes Grey (Anne). Emily unfortunately died before completing another novel. Anne published The Tenant of Wildfell Hall in 1848 and then passed away. Charlotte wrote Shirley in 1849 and Villette in 1853 with her very first novel The Professor being published after her 1855 death. Emma, also written by Charlotte, was published in 1860 but is considered unfinished.
Louisa May Alcott (1832 -1888) – an American novelist who is most famous for her novel Little Women. Later she wrote Good Wives in 1869, Little Men in 1871, and Jo’s Boys in 1886; and all these novels were in part a sequel of Little Women. She continued to write other novels which were all well received. Little Women in recent years was made into a Hollywood movie.
Lewis Carroll (1832 – 1898) – also went by the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, was an English author who also had other careers. He is most recognized for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and it’s sequel Through the Looking Glass, as well as nonsensical poems such as Jabberwocky and The Hunting of the Snark. He was also an inventor who invented a game today named Scrabble and Word Ladder (which he called Doublet), among other inventions.
D. H. Lawrence (1885 – 1930) – born David Herbert Richards Lawrence, was an English author and literary critic whose opinions were very controversial for the time. His first novel was The White Peacock followed by an autobiography Sons and Lovers, and The Trespasser in 1911. In 1915 he was investigated for what was viewed as obscenity in The Rainbow and Women in Love. He also wrote numerous other works including essays and short stories.
Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870) – born Charles John Huffam Dickens, and also went by the pen name “Boz”. He was an English novelist who’s first novel was The Pickwick Papers in 1836. His most notable works include Oliver Twist followed by A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, David Copperfield, and Great Expectations among many others.
Lucy Maud (L.M.) Montgomery (1874 – 1942) – was a Canadian author. She started with over 100 short stories in magazines and newspapers from 1897 – 1907. Montgomery is best known for her beloved series of novels involving a red headed orphan girl named Anne “with an E”. Her first novel was Anne of Green Gables (1908) and several other “Anne” based books followed. The final “Anne” novel was Anne of Ingleside (1939) and followed them with a collection of short stories until her death. Since that time she has left a legacy with a tourist area on Prince Edward Island, Canada, a T.V. Miniseries: Anne of Green Gables, and two T.V. series: Emily of New Moon and Road to Avonlea.
Alexandre Dumas, père (1802 – 1870) – was born Duman Davy de la Pailletene and was a French writer. He wrote articles for magazines and plays for the theatre starting in 1829 with Henry III and His Court and followed with other plays and essays. He released the famous novels The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers and all it’s sequels, as well as other novels. In June 2005, another novel, The Knight of Sainte-Hermine, was discovered and published in France.
New England has always been famous for its poets, writers and authors.The Puritans
From the Puritan sermons and devotional writings of Increase Mather (1639-1723) and his son Cotton Mather (1663-1728), New England literature has come all the way to the punchy Spencer thrillers of Robert B Parker. Along the way, New England has fostered some of America’s greatest writers.
In Puritan New England, education was highly valued, for it was through education (meaning theological study)that one came to know God. The region’s great collegesand universities—Amherst, Bowdoin,Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Tufts, Williams, Yale—wereall founded for the training of young men forthe ministry. Bythe late 1800’s this theological preoccupation hadbeen abandoned, and New England’s colleges became magnetsfor literati of all beliefs and opinions. Noah Webster
The runaway bestseller of the early 1800’s was not a book of sermons, nor a novel, nor even a historyof the late war with England; and the book remainsa bestseller to this day. It’s the AmericanDictionaryof the English Language, by Yale graduate NoahWebster (1758-1843). First published in 1828,Webster’s 70,000-word dictionary was bought by hundredsof thousands of Americansevery year—and still is. You can visit his house in West Hartford CT. He is buried in Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven CT.Emerson
Among the writers most closely associated with New England is Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882). Emerson’s beliefs in the mystical unity of nature and the divine, and Thoreau’s (see below) championing of the simple life in tune with nature’slaws, were radical in 19th-century Concord,Massachusetts.Today such unitarian and ecological beliefs are acceptedby many people around the world. Along with other writers, Emerson was a founder of the Transcendental movement, and had more effect on American literature than any other NewEnglander. You can visit his house and walk the Emerson-Thoreau Amble, the path that he and friend Henry Thoreau often followed to Walden Pond. Emerson and his family are buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.
The composite photo above brings together some of New England’s greatest literary lights. From left to right: John Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Lothrop Motley, Amos Bronson Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Russell Lowell, Louis Agassiz, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862), a friend of Emerson’s and graduate of Harvard, is best remembered for Walden, or Life in the Woods(1854). This journal of observations and opinions writtenduring his solitary sojourn (1845-47) on Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, may be the best-known bookon New England. Thoreau was also known for CivilDisobedience,and his accounts of walking trips entitled TheMaineWoods and Cape Cod. You can walk the Emerson-Thoreau Amble, the path that he and his mentor Emerson walked to Walden Pond, where you can visit the site of Thoreau’s cottage. He’s buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.Hawthorne
Waymarker on the path to Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, ConcordMassachusetts.
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864), was born in Salem, Massachusetts, attended Bowdoin College in Maine, thenpursued a career which produced The Scarlet Letter,Twice-told Tales, and The House of theSeven Gables.Hawthorne is thought by many to be the writer who establishedthe truly American short story. You can visit The Old Manse and The Wayside in Concord MA, where he and Sophia Hawthorne lived, and also Arrowhead, Herman Melville’s house in Pittsfield MA. The Hawthornes are buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.
Hawthorne’s contemporary, Edgar Allen Poe (1809-1849), was born in Boston, but pursued his career in Virginia. Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines ListLongfellow
Among New England poets, the 1800’s belonged to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882). Born in Portland, Maine, he attended Bowdoin College, taught at Harvard, and lived in a big yellow house on Brattle Street in Cambridge MA which is now a historic landmark. Several of Longfellow’s poems are so much a part of Americana that many forget that he wrote them: Paul Revere’s Ride, The Song of Hiawatha, The Village Blacksmith, Excelsior, and The Wreck of the Hesperus are among the better-known ones. He is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge MA.
Preceding and during the Civil War, New England writers such as abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879) and John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) contributed their literary and poetic talents to the struggle to end slavery. Mark Twain
Few Americans realize that Samuel Clemens (1835-1910), better known as Mark Twain, settled in Hartford, Connecticut at the age of 35. Though Missouri-born, Twain wrote his masterpieces Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn in Hartford, as well as The Prince and the Pauper, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. Touring his grand Victorian mansion at Nook Farm is the high point of a visit to Hartford. He is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Elmira NY. 19th-Century Women
The Industrial Revolution brought New Englanders wealth, and daughters of wealthy manufacturers and merchants were able to turn their energies to education and literature rather than household work. In the 1800’s, many excellent New England women’s colleges produced graduates instilled with a spirit of independence and self-reliance.Alcott
Louisa May Alcott, daughter of noted teacher and literatus Amos Bronson Alcott, was a storyteller from childhood. Writing to help support her family, her stories and books brought her well-deserved fame and prosperity. Her partly-autobiographical Little Women (1868-69) may be the most successful children’s book ever, still in print after a century and a half. Mujercitas in Spanish, Piccole Donne in Italian, Küçük Hanımlar in Turkish, Les quatre filles du docteur Marsch in French—Little Women has been translated into dozens of languages and continues to be enjoyed by children around the world. You can visit The Wayside, Orchard House and Fruitlands where she lived as a child. She is buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.Beecher StoweAuthors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Examples
Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) felt compelled to expose the injustice of slavery in her novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), which sold an amazing 300,000 copies in one year. She is buried in Phillips Academy Cemetery, Andover MA (near Lowell).Dickinson
Opposite in temperament to the energetic Ms. Stowe was poet Emily Dickenson (1830-1886), a native of Amherst, Massachusetts, who lived there in near seclusion most of her life. Only seven of her poems were published during her lifetime, but the posthumous editing and publishing of nearly 1,000 poems established her reputation. Her influence on American poetry is matched only by that of Robert Frost. You can visit the Dickinson Homestead in Amherst MA. She is buried in Amherst’s West Cemetery. Lee Bates
Among New England’s other famous female poets is Katharine Lee Bates (1859-1929), a native of Falmouth, Massachusetts and a graduate of Wellesley College. Though much of her work is unfamilar today, every American knows her patriotic hymn, America the Beautiful. She is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Falmouth MA on Cape Cod.Frost
Robert Frost (1874-1963) was born in San Francisco, but his family had lived in New England for generations. He moved to New England early in life, attended Dartmouth and Harvard without taking a degree, and later returned to teach poetry at Amherst and Harvard. His many books capture the quintessence of New England living and the Yankee soul. You can visit his farms, The Frost Place in Franconia NH, the Robert Frost Farm in Ripton VT, and The Robert Frost Farm in Derry NH. Frost is buried in Old Bennington VT.
Download here: http://gg.gg/o8329
https://diarynote.indered.space
William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) – born in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England and nicknamed “The Bard”, and was an English poet and playwright. In his lifetime he wrote 38 plays, 2 narrative poems, 154 sonnets and many other poems. He was regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and he is still revered to date; inspiring festivals and special events. Some of his famous works include Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet, and Macbeth among many others.
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Printable
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Free
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines List
*Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Examples
*’The very best I’ve ever read, my favorite thing in all world literature (and that includes all the heavy classics) is a novelette called Calumet K by Merwin-Webster,’ Rand wrote in 1945.
*Inappropriate The list (including its title or description) facilitates illegal activity, or contains hate speech or ad hominem attacks on a fellow Goodreads member or author. Spam or Self-Promotional The list is spam or self-promotional. Incorrect Book The list contains an incorrect book (please specify the title of the book).
*This page is dedicated to the Contemporary American Poets and Poems. The poets listed below were either born in America or else published much of their poetry while living in that country.
*Writers create written works in a wide range of literary genres with many writers working across genres. Writers can be broadly classified as poets, novelists, journalists, critics, editors, lyricists, playwrights, historians, and biographers. Browse this section to learn about the life and works of famous writers from across the world.
Mark Twain (1835 – 1910) – born Samuel Langhorne Clemens, he went by the pen name of Mark Twain and was an American writer. He is most known for his novels The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court among others. He has been named “the father of American literature”.Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Printable
Jane Austen (1775 – 1817) – was an English novelist. She is most famous for her novels, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, and Emma being her most famous novels; with two others published after her death and one of which she never completed before her death. Three of her novels have been made into Hollywood movies.Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Free
A list of all authors featured at American Literature, organized alphabetically by last name (in rows, left to right) so that you can find your favorite authors’ books, stories, poems and essays quickly and easily.
The Bronte sisters: Charlotte Bronte (1816 – 1855), Emily (1818 – 1848), Anne (1820 – 1849) – were all English writers in the 1840s and 1850s. They started as poets under pseudonyms in 1846 but then they all wrote a novel each: Jane Eyre (Charlotte Bronte), Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte), Agnes Grey (Anne). Emily unfortunately died before completing another novel. Anne published The Tenant of Wildfell Hall in 1848 and then passed away. Charlotte wrote Shirley in 1849 and Villette in 1853 with her very first novel The Professor being published after her 1855 death. Emma, also written by Charlotte, was published in 1860 but is considered unfinished.
Louisa May Alcott (1832 -1888) – an American novelist who is most famous for her novel Little Women. Later she wrote Good Wives in 1869, Little Men in 1871, and Jo’s Boys in 1886; and all these novels were in part a sequel of Little Women. She continued to write other novels which were all well received. Little Women in recent years was made into a Hollywood movie.
Lewis Carroll (1832 – 1898) – also went by the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, was an English author who also had other careers. He is most recognized for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and it’s sequel Through the Looking Glass, as well as nonsensical poems such as Jabberwocky and The Hunting of the Snark. He was also an inventor who invented a game today named Scrabble and Word Ladder (which he called Doublet), among other inventions.
D. H. Lawrence (1885 – 1930) – born David Herbert Richards Lawrence, was an English author and literary critic whose opinions were very controversial for the time. His first novel was The White Peacock followed by an autobiography Sons and Lovers, and The Trespasser in 1911. In 1915 he was investigated for what was viewed as obscenity in The Rainbow and Women in Love. He also wrote numerous other works including essays and short stories.
Charles Dickens (1812 – 1870) – born Charles John Huffam Dickens, and also went by the pen name “Boz”. He was an English novelist who’s first novel was The Pickwick Papers in 1836. His most notable works include Oliver Twist followed by A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, David Copperfield, and Great Expectations among many others.
Lucy Maud (L.M.) Montgomery (1874 – 1942) – was a Canadian author. She started with over 100 short stories in magazines and newspapers from 1897 – 1907. Montgomery is best known for her beloved series of novels involving a red headed orphan girl named Anne “with an E”. Her first novel was Anne of Green Gables (1908) and several other “Anne” based books followed. The final “Anne” novel was Anne of Ingleside (1939) and followed them with a collection of short stories until her death. Since that time she has left a legacy with a tourist area on Prince Edward Island, Canada, a T.V. Miniseries: Anne of Green Gables, and two T.V. series: Emily of New Moon and Road to Avonlea.
Alexandre Dumas, père (1802 – 1870) – was born Duman Davy de la Pailletene and was a French writer. He wrote articles for magazines and plays for the theatre starting in 1829 with Henry III and His Court and followed with other plays and essays. He released the famous novels The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers and all it’s sequels, as well as other novels. In June 2005, another novel, The Knight of Sainte-Hermine, was discovered and published in France.
New England has always been famous for its poets, writers and authors.The Puritans
From the Puritan sermons and devotional writings of Increase Mather (1639-1723) and his son Cotton Mather (1663-1728), New England literature has come all the way to the punchy Spencer thrillers of Robert B Parker. Along the way, New England has fostered some of America’s greatest writers.
In Puritan New England, education was highly valued, for it was through education (meaning theological study)that one came to know God. The region’s great collegesand universities—Amherst, Bowdoin,Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Tufts, Williams, Yale—wereall founded for the training of young men forthe ministry. Bythe late 1800’s this theological preoccupation hadbeen abandoned, and New England’s colleges became magnetsfor literati of all beliefs and opinions. Noah Webster
The runaway bestseller of the early 1800’s was not a book of sermons, nor a novel, nor even a historyof the late war with England; and the book remainsa bestseller to this day. It’s the AmericanDictionaryof the English Language, by Yale graduate NoahWebster (1758-1843). First published in 1828,Webster’s 70,000-word dictionary was bought by hundredsof thousands of Americansevery year—and still is. You can visit his house in West Hartford CT. He is buried in Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven CT.Emerson
Among the writers most closely associated with New England is Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882). Emerson’s beliefs in the mystical unity of nature and the divine, and Thoreau’s (see below) championing of the simple life in tune with nature’slaws, were radical in 19th-century Concord,Massachusetts.Today such unitarian and ecological beliefs are acceptedby many people around the world. Along with other writers, Emerson was a founder of the Transcendental movement, and had more effect on American literature than any other NewEnglander. You can visit his house and walk the Emerson-Thoreau Amble, the path that he and friend Henry Thoreau often followed to Walden Pond. Emerson and his family are buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.
The composite photo above brings together some of New England’s greatest literary lights. From left to right: John Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Lothrop Motley, Amos Bronson Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Russell Lowell, Louis Agassiz, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862), a friend of Emerson’s and graduate of Harvard, is best remembered for Walden, or Life in the Woods(1854). This journal of observations and opinions writtenduring his solitary sojourn (1845-47) on Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, may be the best-known bookon New England. Thoreau was also known for CivilDisobedience,and his accounts of walking trips entitled TheMaineWoods and Cape Cod. You can walk the Emerson-Thoreau Amble, the path that he and his mentor Emerson walked to Walden Pond, where you can visit the site of Thoreau’s cottage. He’s buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.Hawthorne
Waymarker on the path to Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, ConcordMassachusetts.
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864), was born in Salem, Massachusetts, attended Bowdoin College in Maine, thenpursued a career which produced The Scarlet Letter,Twice-told Tales, and The House of theSeven Gables.Hawthorne is thought by many to be the writer who establishedthe truly American short story. You can visit The Old Manse and The Wayside in Concord MA, where he and Sophia Hawthorne lived, and also Arrowhead, Herman Melville’s house in Pittsfield MA. The Hawthornes are buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.
Hawthorne’s contemporary, Edgar Allen Poe (1809-1849), was born in Boston, but pursued his career in Virginia. Authors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines ListLongfellow
Among New England poets, the 1800’s belonged to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882). Born in Portland, Maine, he attended Bowdoin College, taught at Harvard, and lived in a big yellow house on Brattle Street in Cambridge MA which is now a historic landmark. Several of Longfellow’s poems are so much a part of Americana that many forget that he wrote them: Paul Revere’s Ride, The Song of Hiawatha, The Village Blacksmith, Excelsior, and The Wreck of the Hesperus are among the better-known ones. He is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge MA.
Preceding and during the Civil War, New England writers such as abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879) and John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) contributed their literary and poetic talents to the struggle to end slavery. Mark Twain
Few Americans realize that Samuel Clemens (1835-1910), better known as Mark Twain, settled in Hartford, Connecticut at the age of 35. Though Missouri-born, Twain wrote his masterpieces Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn in Hartford, as well as The Prince and the Pauper, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. Touring his grand Victorian mansion at Nook Farm is the high point of a visit to Hartford. He is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Elmira NY. 19th-Century Women
The Industrial Revolution brought New Englanders wealth, and daughters of wealthy manufacturers and merchants were able to turn their energies to education and literature rather than household work. In the 1800’s, many excellent New England women’s colleges produced graduates instilled with a spirit of independence and self-reliance.Alcott
Louisa May Alcott, daughter of noted teacher and literatus Amos Bronson Alcott, was a storyteller from childhood. Writing to help support her family, her stories and books brought her well-deserved fame and prosperity. Her partly-autobiographical Little Women (1868-69) may be the most successful children’s book ever, still in print after a century and a half. Mujercitas in Spanish, Piccole Donne in Italian, Küçük Hanımlar in Turkish, Les quatre filles du docteur Marsch in French—Little Women has been translated into dozens of languages and continues to be enjoyed by children around the world. You can visit The Wayside, Orchard House and Fruitlands where she lived as a child. She is buried on Authors Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA.Beecher StoweAuthors And Poetsoutlander Lists   & Timelines Examples
Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) felt compelled to expose the injustice of slavery in her novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), which sold an amazing 300,000 copies in one year. She is buried in Phillips Academy Cemetery, Andover MA (near Lowell).Dickinson
Opposite in temperament to the energetic Ms. Stowe was poet Emily Dickenson (1830-1886), a native of Amherst, Massachusetts, who lived there in near seclusion most of her life. Only seven of her poems were published during her lifetime, but the posthumous editing and publishing of nearly 1,000 poems established her reputation. Her influence on American poetry is matched only by that of Robert Frost. You can visit the Dickinson Homestead in Amherst MA. She is buried in Amherst’s West Cemetery. Lee Bates
Among New England’s other famous female poets is Katharine Lee Bates (1859-1929), a native of Falmouth, Massachusetts and a graduate of Wellesley College. Though much of her work is unfamilar today, every American knows her patriotic hymn, America the Beautiful. She is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Falmouth MA on Cape Cod.Frost
Robert Frost (1874-1963) was born in San Francisco, but his family had lived in New England for generations. He moved to New England early in life, attended Dartmouth and Harvard without taking a degree, and later returned to teach poetry at Amherst and Harvard. His many books capture the quintessence of New England living and the Yankee soul. You can visit his farms, The Frost Place in Franconia NH, the Robert Frost Farm in Ripton VT, and The Robert Frost Farm in Derry NH. Frost is buried in Old Bennington VT.
Download here: http://gg.gg/o8329
https://diarynote.indered.space
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