Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Poems about the Environment and Conservation of natural resources. Powerful Poems about the dangers of Pollution, Climate Change and Global Warming on our environment.
Poets today are serving as witnesses to climate change while bringing attention to important environmental issues and advocating for preservation and conservation. In this collection, we’ve brought together environmental poetry from the past 70 years, from early practitioners of this evolving genre—including Wendell Berry and A.R. Ammons ...
Eliza Griswold, ‘ Ovid on Climate Change ’. With an echo of Geoffrey Hill’s poem about Ovid in the Third Reich, Griswold, an American poet born in 1973, offers a short poem about climate change, summoning the rising temperatures of equatorial and sub-Saharan Africa (Griswold, too, mentions Ethiopia).
These poems about the environment serve as reminders of the beauty, fragility, and interconnectedness of our world. Through their heartfelt words, poets inspire us to appreciate, protect, and restore our environment for future generations.
Nature Poems. Poems about wide, wild open spaces. BY John Felstiner. Originally Published: November 05, 2007. Illustration by Diana Sudyka. 1. Emily Dickinson, “A narrow Fellow in the Grass”. Dickinson was annoyed when a friend published this poem as “The Snake”—she wanted no title, as if the poem were a riddle.
Browse poems engaging with the climate crisis, including poems about climate change, global warming, nature, and the environment.
Environment poems written by contemporary poets. Browse poems about the Environment with our unique collection of high quality Environment poems.
While traditional poetry has a timeless appeal, contemporary poets have also embraced the genre to address modern environmental issues. Prince Ea, an American spoken word artist, creates thought-provoking poetry that tackles pressing concerns, including climate change and deforestation.
Poets have long been inspired to tune their lyrics to the variations in landscape, the changes in season, and the natural phenomena around them. Read a selection of poems about nature.
Poetry can make listeners aware of critical connections between humans and our biosphere. In the deceptively simple “inside out,” Bill Yake reveals both the structural redundancy of form between human lungs and trees and their parallel function of gas exchange: