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She is widely regarded as one of the greatest poets of haiku (then called hokku). Some of Chiyo's most notable works include "The Morning Glory", "Putting up my hair", and "Again the women". Being one of the few women haiku poets in pre-modern Japanese literature, Chiyo-ni has been seen an influential figure. Before her time, haiku by women ...
This practice significantly influenced his poems, leading to his posthumous recognition as the "Poet Buddha." His works are collected in Secretary General Wang's Anthology, which includes 400 poems. He excelled in painting images of people, bamboo forests and scenery of mountains and rivers.
Mary Oppen (1908–1990), American activist, artist, photographer, poet and writer; Josefina Pla (1903–1999), Spanish poet, playwright, art critic and painter; Margaret Steuart Pollard (1904–1996), English scholar and poet in the Cornish language; Kathleen Raine (1908–2003), English poet, critic and scholar
The influential critic and editor Rufus Wilmot Griswold dedicated his famous anthology The Poets and Poetry of America to Allston in 1842. [14] Poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 17 years after Allston's death, wrote that: "One man may sweeten a whole time. I never pass through Cambridge Port without thinking of Allston.
Anatol Stern (1899–1968), Polish poet and art critic; Gerald Stern (1925–2022), US poet; Marinko Stevanović (born 1961), Bosnian poet; C. J. Stevens (1927–2021), US writer of poetry, fiction and biography; Wallace Stevens (1880–1955), US modernist poet; Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894), Scottish novelist, poet and travel writer
P., as he was popularly known, was a habitual nomad and was reported to have led a bohemian lifestyle, wandering across Kerala, living in several places, meeting their people and making them part of his life and literature. [6] Poetry formed his main genre of work, though he has also written novels, short stories, articles and plays. [7]
In it Wordsworth discusses what he sees as the elements of a new type of poetry, one based on the "real language of men", and which avoids the poetic diction of much 18th-century poetry. Here, Wordsworth gives his famous definition of poetry, as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" which "takes its origin from emotion recollected in ...