In a poem by this author, the title creature “says the highway dust is over all” and predicts “that other fall we name the fall.” In another poem by this author, “part of a moon” falls “down the west” and drags “the whole sky with it to the hills.” This author of “The Oven Bird” wrote a poem that defines “home” as “the place where… they have to take you in” and begins with Mary waiting for her husband who says, “Silas is back.” In another poem by this author, a “little horse” “gives his harness bells a shake” to ask the speaker “if there is some mistake.” That poem by this author ends, “I have promises to keep, / And miles to go before I sleep.” For 10 points, name this author of monologues like “The Death of the Hired Man” who also wrote “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening.” ■END■
ANSWER: Robert Frost
<Editors, American Literature>
= Average correct buzz position