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Harriet Bates (1856–1886), wrote under the name Eleanor Putnam; Joseph Bathanti (born 1953) Dawn-Michelle Baude (born 1959) Isaac Rieman Baxley (1850–1920) Charles Baxter (born 1947) Abel Beach (1829–1899) Ray Young Bear (born 1950) Anthony Bearden (1913–1966) Paul Beatty (born 1962) Kenneth Lawrence Beaudoin (c. 1913–1995) George ...
List of Brontë poems; List of poems by Ivan Bunin; List of poems by Catullus; List of Emily Dickinson poems; List of poems by Robert Frost; List of poems by John Keats; List of poems by Philip Larkin; List of poems by Samuel Taylor Coleridge; List of poems by Walt Whitman; List of poems by William Wordsworth; List of works by Andrew Marvell
The Library of Congress produces a guide to American poetry inspired by the 9/11 attacks, including anthologies and books dedicated to the subject. [33] [34] Robert Pinsky has a special place in American poetry as he was the poet laureate of the United States for three terms. [35] No other poet has been so honored.
Hilda Siller (1861–1945), American poet and short story writer; Ron Silliman (born 1946), US poet of Language poetry; Shel Silverstein (1930–1999), US poet, musician and children's writer; Simeon Simev (born 1949), Macedonian poet, essayist and journalist; Charles Simic (born 1938), Serbian-US poet; US Poet Laureate, 2007–2008
Mu'allaqat, Arabic poems written by seven poets in Classical Arabic, these poems are very similar to epic poems and specially the poem of Antarah ibn Shaddad; Parsifal by Richard Wagner (opera, composed 1880–1882) Pasyón, Filipino religious epic, of which the 1703 and 1814 versions are popular; Popol Vuh, history of the K'iche' people
The Ego-Futurists were another poetry school within Russian Futurism during the 1910s, based on a personality cult. [53] [56] Most prominent figures among them are Igor Severyanin and Vasilisk Gnedov. The Acmeists were a Russian modernist poetic school, which emerged ca. 1911 and to symbols preferred direct expression through exact images.
Let America be America Again; Let Evening Come; Life Is Motion; Lift Every Voice and Sing; Lilith, The Legend of the First Woman; Line-Up for Yesterday; Lines on the Antiquity of Microbes; Little Boy Blue (poem) Little Orphant Annie; Little Rock (poem) Little Things (poem) The Load Of Sugar-Cane; Lost in Translation (poem) Love Is Not All: It ...
Poe biographer Daniel Hoffman says that "Bridal Ballad" is guilty of "one of the most unfortunate rhymes in American poetry this side of Thomas Holley Chivers". He is referring to the name of the bride's dead lover, "D'Elormie", which he calls "patently a forced rhyme" for "o'er me" and "before me" in the previous lines. [6]