Poetry fascinates readers for many reasons, from its unique language use to the varied subjects that poets have dramatized down through the centuries.
The Ancients, including Homer and Vergil, captivated audiences with their ability to spin a memorable yarn. Ancient Indian epics, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, were so easily memorized that it was centuries before anyone wrote them down.
From the Ancients to Middle Eastern and Western Eurpoean bards to early Americans like Phillis Wheatley, Emily Dickinson, and Walt Whitman to the most contemporary poets such as recent poets laureate, Louise Glück, Ted Kooser, and currently Charles Simic the journey through poetry remains a colorful and enticing one.
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In: British Poetry
Love is the most important subject for this speaker/poet of the sonnets. The "little songs" do consistently sing of it-not ordinary or romantic love but soul love. more...
In: British Poetry
Seamus Heaney's "Whatever you say, say nothing" consists of four parts. The poem is roughly free verse with an irregular rime scheme. more...
Stevens' 'The Death of a Soldier'
In: American Poetry
Wallace Stevens' use of the imagination in poetry reveals the unchartered territory that readers have come to expect from the modernist mindset. more...
In: British Poetry
The poet/speaker again lauds his own ability to immortalize his subjects. In this sonnet, he addresses the sonnet itself in order to praise it. more...
In: British Poetry
In sonnet 54, the speaker avers that beauty is only beautiful when it represents the truth of the soul; outward beauty is truly only skin deep. more...
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Caedmon - First Known English Poet
In: British Poetry
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Rachel Bellerby
In: Poetry (general)
In: British Poetry
In: Canadian Poetry
By: Caitlin Ward
In: World Poetry
By: Caitlin Ward
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