North of Boston is a collection of poems by Robert Frost, published in 1914. The collection includes some of Frost's most famous and widely anthologized poems, including "Mending Wall," "After Apple-Picking," and "The Death of the Hired Man."
The poems in North of Boston are set in rural New England, in small towns and farms, and often deal with themes of isolation, loss, and the struggle to find meaning in a changing world. Frost's use of colloquial language and regional dialects helped to establish him as a distinctive voice in American literature.
North of Boston was a critical and commercial success, cementing Frost's reputation as a major force in American poetry. The collection helped to establish Frost as a poet of the countryside, and his depictions of rural life have come to define the New England landscape in the popular imagination.
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