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Djuna Barnes, The Book of Repulsive Women, her first book of poems, which she described as a collection of "rhythms and drawings" Stephen Vincent Benét, Five Men and Pompey [13] Adelaide Crapsey, Verse, [13] featuring her invention of the quintain, a five-line form; T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock first published in Poetry ...
This is a list of major poets of the Modernist poetry This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
The Poetry House - Museum of Halina Poświatowska in Częstochowa, fot. Ivonna Nowicka. Her works have been collected in the four-volume Dzieła (Works), published by Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków, Poland, 1997, of which the first two volumes (several hundred pages) are poems, and the latter two prose and letters, respectively. She is the ...
Marian Allen, The Wind on the Downs; Laurence Binyon, The New World: Poems [6] Vera Brittain, Verses of a VAD; Rupert Brooke (died on active service 1915), The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke [6] Émile Cammaerts, Messines and other Poems, Belgian-born poet writing in English; Walter de la Mare, Motley, and Other Poems [6]
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
A 1913 photograph of Ezra Pound, one of the most influential modernist poets. The roots of English-language poetic modernism can be traced back to the works of a number of earlier writers, including Walt Whitman, whose long lines approached a type of free verse, the prose poetry of Oscar Wilde, Robert Browning's subversion of the poetic self, Emily Dickinson's compression and the writings of ...
She wrote her first poem at the age of 10. [2] During her life, she studied English and French literature, Latin, and Greek poetry. [ 4 ] Al-Malaika graduated in 1944 from the College of Arts in Baghdad and later completed a master's degree in comparative literature at the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a Degree of Excellence. [ 5 ]
The American New Criticism returned to the lyric in the 1950s, advocating a poetry that made conventional use of rhyme, meter and stanzas, and was modestly personal in the lyric tradition. [6] Lyric poets consistent with the New Criticism ethos include Robert Frost and Robert Lowell. [7]