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50 States of Generosity: Kentucky

By Megan Willome 4 Comments

cumberland falls Kentucky US river trees

We continue our 50 States of Generosity series with a focus on Kentucky—its bluegrass and its song, “Blue Moon of Kentucky.”

Filed Under: 50 States, Bird Poems, Blog

Poet Laura: Passing on the Laura-ship

By Karen Paul Holmes 6 Comments

Venice at sunrise

Karen Paul Holmes bids farewell as she concludes her term as Tweetspeak’s Poet Laura and passes her Laura-ship on to another.

Filed Under: Blog, Poet Laura

Can a Machine Write Better Than You?—5 Best (And Worst) AI Poem Generators

By Sara Barkat 8 Comments

fantasy antler ai woman artificial intelligence

Ever wanted AI to write a poem for you? Well, you’re in luck—here are 5 best AI poem generators around, featuring Hades and Persephone.

Filed Under: Ballad Poems, Blog, English Teaching, English Teaching Resources, Funny Poems, Humorous Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

“Fill For Me a Brimming Bowl

woman holds her hard up to a man and turns her body away as if rejecting him, the man grasps pearls

< Return to All John Keats Fill For Me a Brimming Bowl Fill for me a brimming bowl And let me in it drown my soul: But put therein some drug, designed To banish Woman from my mind: For I want not the stream inspiring That heats the sense with lewd desiring, But I want […]

50 States of Generosity: California

By Megan Willome 6 Comments

California Sunset Montecito

We continue our 50 States of Generosity series with a focus on California and the all-American fabric produced there: denim.

Filed Under: 50 States, Blog

Earth Song Book Club: Garden Poems

By Rebecca D. Martin 2 Comments

Leafy greens in garden

In this week’s Earth Song discussion, Rebecca Martin starts smack dab in the middle of garden poems.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Earth Song, Ecopoetry, Garden Poems, Nature Poems, Patron Only

Classic Biography: “Edgar Lee Masters” by Herbert Russell

By Glynn Young 1 Comment

Prairie Masters bio Russell

In his classic biography of Edgar Lee Masters, Herbert Russell tells the story of a writer defined by one single, enormously successful work.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, Poems, poetry, Poets

Poetry Prompt: Poem for a Summer’s Finish

By Callie Feyen 1 Comment

Sunlight valley Norwegian Fjord

Join author Callie Feyen has she explores summer’s finish and autumn’s beginning as her daughter prepares to start high school.

Filed Under: Blog, Poems, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, Poets, writer's group resources, writing prompts

Children’s Book Club: ‘The Cat Who Saved Books’

By Megan Willome 6 Comments

Why save books? Because they have souls. Join our Children’s Book Club as we read Sosuke Natsukawa’s “The Cat Who Saved Books.”

Filed Under: A Story in Every Soul, Cat Poems, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Children's Stories

Earth Song Book Club: Force of Nature

By Rebecca D. Martin 9 Comments

misty rocky shore

In this week’s book club discussion, Rebecca Martin moves through the poems in Earth Song as a force of nature.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Earth Song, Ecopoetry, Nature Poems, Patron Only

Perspective: The Poet Takes a Bike Ride

By Megan Willome 3 Comments

Vancouver Island forests

How does a poet gain perspective? Megan Willome takes a bike ride—in Canada. Share your August reads, fellow poets!

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Essays, Perspective, poetry, Writing Life

Earth Song Book Club: The Wild Places

By Rebecca D. Martin 11 Comments

yellow buds in spring trees

In this week’s Earth Song book club, Rebecca Martin considers the power of poems to transport the reader to another place, whether the woodlands or the wilds.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, Earth Song, Ecopoetry, Nature Poems, Patron Only, Tree Poems

Poets and Poems: Simon Armitage and “The Owl and the Nightingale”

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

Barn Owl Simon Armitage

British Poet Laureate Simon Armitage has translated the medieval poem “The Owl and the Nightingale,” and it sounds rather familiar.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, Britain, English Teaching Resources, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

Poetry Prompt: Start Your Writing with Inspiration

By Callie Feyen 4 Comments

How does a writer start writing? With inspiration. For Callie Feyen, that begins with a poem.

Filed Under: Blog, Poems, poetry, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, writer's group resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman (full text)

The Yellow Wall-Paper Graphic Novel cropped cover

Read the classic story below, or check out our list of The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman characters, or read the author’s own essay on Why I Wrote the Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Want something shorter? Check out the Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman Summary. Or enjoy The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte […]

“Addressed to the Same” by John Keats

self portrait of the older Haydon

< Return to All John Keats Addressed to the Same Great spirits now on earth are sojourning; He of the cloud, the cataract, the lake, Who on Helvellyn’s summit, wide awake, Catches his freshness from Archangel’s wing: He of the rose, the violet, the spring, The social smile, the chain for Freedom’s sake: And lo!—whose […]

“A Song of Opposites” by John Keats

a young boy sits and touches a skull with the phrase memento mori written on etching

< Return to All John Keats A Song of Opposites Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow, Lethe’s weed and Hermes’ feather; Come to-day, and come to-morrow, I do love you both together! I love to mark sad faces in fair weather; And hear a merry laugh amid the thunder; Fair and foul I love together. Meadows […]

“A Galloway Song” by John Keats

many people in a wedding procession come down to cross water, some take rest and take their shoes off while others cross over

< Return to All John Keats A Galloway Song Ah! ken ye what I met the day Out oure the Mountains A coming down by craggies grey An mossie fountains — A[h] goud hair’d Marie yeve I pray Ane minute’s guessing — For that I met upon the way Is past expressing. As I stood […]

“A Pæan” by Edgar Allan Poe

a painting of half woman holding flowers, half skeleton tats hold sickle

< Return to Edgar Allan Poe Poems A Pæan How shall the burial rite be read? The solemn song be sung? The requiem for the loveliest dead, That ever died so young? Her friends are gazing on her, And on her gaudy bier, And weep!—oh! to dishonor Dead beauty with a tear! They loved her […]

“In Youth I Have Known One” by Edgar Allan Poe

ceiling painting showing figured in heaven

< Return to Edgar Allan Poe Poems In Youth I Have Known One In youth I have known one with whom the Earth In secret communing held—as he with it, In daylight, and in beauty, from his birth: Whose fervid, flickering torch of life was lit From the sun and stars, whence he had drawn […]

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