Mephisto
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2005
- Messages
- 6,064
I thought this was a good companion thread to "Who's Your Favorite Painter."
I've got a degree in English and I concentrated primarily on the Romantic Period poets. I love poetry in general though and my list of favorite poets can be long and tedious, so I'll try to shorten it for the purpose of this thread.
More or less chronologically, I like:
Homer
For the Romantic Period poets, William Blake for "Songs of Innocence" and "Songs of Experience."
Robert Burns - especially for "To a Mouse (which reminds me of Jethro Tull's song - "One Brown Mouse") and "Ae Fond Kiss"
William Wordsworth - for "The World Is Too Much with Us"
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - for everything, but especially for "The Eolian Harp," "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," "Kubla Khan," and "Christabel."
I especially like Percy B. Shelley for "Ozymandias" (I'm doing a painting based on "Ozymandias" with the bust of George W. lying in the Iraqi sand), "Mont Blanc," "Prometheus Unbound," and "To Night."
and wrapping up the Romantic Period, I absolutely loved John Keats, especially for "Endymion: A Poetic Romance," "When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be," "Sonnet to Sleep," "Lamia," and "Ode on Melancholy." I also loved the biography of Keats (how prophetically sad).
Among the Victorians l like:
Alfred Lord Tennyson for "The Kraken," "The Lotos-Eaters," and "To Virgil,"
Elizabeth Barrett Browning for "To George Sand: A Desire," and "Sonnets from the Portuguese"
I never much cared for the poets in early American literature (too didactic), but I've always been fond of the transendentalists. My favorite poet around the American civil war was Edgar Allan Poe (in spite of the fact that he was a racist).
In the 20th century - I liked (among British poets) William Butler Yeats (and his "spiral" philosophy) for "The Stolen Child," "When You Are Old," "The Wild Swans at Coole," and "Byzantium."
Virginia Woolf for "The Mark on the Wall"
James Joyce for "Ulysseus," and "The Dead"
T.S. Eliot (I'm sure he'd appreciate being counted as a British poet although he was actually American) - everything, but especially "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," and "The Waste Land"
for the post-modernists
Ted Hughes for "How to Paint a Water Lily," "The Minotaur," and "A Woman Unconscious"
Sylvia Plath (Ted Hughes wife) for everything she ever wrote, but especially "Witch Burning," "Daddy," "Cut" and "Ariel" her suicide was also tragic
Anne Sexton (friend of Plath - and fellow suicide) for "When Man Enters Woman," "The Kiss," and "Words."
I've probably bored you enough so I'll stop here and allow everyone (and I hope a lot of people respond) throw in their two cents.
I've got a degree in English and I concentrated primarily on the Romantic Period poets. I love poetry in general though and my list of favorite poets can be long and tedious, so I'll try to shorten it for the purpose of this thread.
More or less chronologically, I like:
Homer
For the Romantic Period poets, William Blake for "Songs of Innocence" and "Songs of Experience."
Robert Burns - especially for "To a Mouse (which reminds me of Jethro Tull's song - "One Brown Mouse") and "Ae Fond Kiss"
William Wordsworth - for "The World Is Too Much with Us"
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - for everything, but especially for "The Eolian Harp," "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," "Kubla Khan," and "Christabel."
I especially like Percy B. Shelley for "Ozymandias" (I'm doing a painting based on "Ozymandias" with the bust of George W. lying in the Iraqi sand), "Mont Blanc," "Prometheus Unbound," and "To Night."
and wrapping up the Romantic Period, I absolutely loved John Keats, especially for "Endymion: A Poetic Romance," "When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be," "Sonnet to Sleep," "Lamia," and "Ode on Melancholy." I also loved the biography of Keats (how prophetically sad).
Among the Victorians l like:
Alfred Lord Tennyson for "The Kraken," "The Lotos-Eaters," and "To Virgil,"
Elizabeth Barrett Browning for "To George Sand: A Desire," and "Sonnets from the Portuguese"
I never much cared for the poets in early American literature (too didactic), but I've always been fond of the transendentalists. My favorite poet around the American civil war was Edgar Allan Poe (in spite of the fact that he was a racist).
In the 20th century - I liked (among British poets) William Butler Yeats (and his "spiral" philosophy) for "The Stolen Child," "When You Are Old," "The Wild Swans at Coole," and "Byzantium."
Virginia Woolf for "The Mark on the Wall"
James Joyce for "Ulysseus," and "The Dead"
T.S. Eliot (I'm sure he'd appreciate being counted as a British poet although he was actually American) - everything, but especially "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," and "The Waste Land"
for the post-modernists
Ted Hughes for "How to Paint a Water Lily," "The Minotaur," and "A Woman Unconscious"
Sylvia Plath (Ted Hughes wife) for everything she ever wrote, but especially "Witch Burning," "Daddy," "Cut" and "Ariel" her suicide was also tragic
Anne Sexton (friend of Plath - and fellow suicide) for "When Man Enters Woman," "The Kiss," and "Words."
I've probably bored you enough so I'll stop here and allow everyone (and I hope a lot of people respond) throw in their two cents.