and a clapboard country store, you turn onto a packed dirt road, and at the point where two roads diverge you go to the left and up the small hill. If it's the off-season, and the thin road is deserted, you can park right in front of the white boxy house with the front porch overlooking the mountains. The neighbors won't mind that you're blocking the road a little. They're used to people stopping and staring at the former home of one of America's most loved writers, Robert Frost.
from New Hampshire Magazine: The Homes of Poems
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