Tweetspeak Poetry

  • Home
  • FREE prompts
  • Earth Song
  • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • Teaching Tools
  • Books, Etc.
  • Patron Love

Search Results for: poem in every heart

Dylan Thomas, Christmas, New Orleans, and Me

By Glynn Young 7 Comments

Snowy woods A Child's Christmas in Wales Dylan Thomas

Reading “A Child’s Christmas in Wales” by Dylan Thomas evokes memories of Christmases in New Orleans with family, friends, and Cherry Bounce.

Filed Under: article, Blog, Books, Britain, Classic Books, Poets

Children’s Book Club: ‘The Crossover’

By Megan Willome 8 Comments

Chicago skyline

Tis the season for basketball! Join us for a Children’s Book Club discussion of Kwame Alexander’s novel told through poems, ‘The Crossover.’

Filed Under: Black Poets, Blog, book reviews, Children's Authors, Children's Book Club, Children's Poetry

Poetry Prompt: Poetry brings light to winter gray

By Callie Feyen 14 Comments

What poems bring light to the darkening days of winter? In this week’s poetry prompt Callie Feyen guides us down the gray highway to find beauty.

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

Reader, Come Home: November’s Pages

By Megan Willome 14 Comments

Sandeep Jauhar

Come learn the secrets of being a deep reader with Megan Willome. And share your November pages for our monthy Reader, Come Home column.

Filed Under: Blog, Podcasts, Read for Fun, Read Like a Writer, Reader Come Home, Reading and Books

Literary Friends: Keeping Anna Akhmatova Alive

By Sandra Heska King 34 Comments

Statue grief

Anna Akhmatova’s friends memorized her poems to keep her work alive when it was too dangerous to put pen to paper. Sandra Heska King spotlights this life and death role of literary friends.

Filed Under: Anna Akhmatova, Blog, Friendship Activities and Prompts, Friendship Project, Literary Friends, Patron Only

Memories Poetry Prompt: Something Lost

By Callie Feyen 6 Comments

Careful walking in beauty; it can lead you to lost things.

Is there something you remember that you wish you could return to? Join Callie Feyen in stirring your memories of lost things you wish you could find again—and put them in a poem!

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

Poetry, World War I, and Armistice Day

By Glynn Young 8 Comments

Birch Grove World War I poetry

World War I is the war most closely associated with poetry; poetry characterized the war, and the war changed poetry unlike any war before or since.

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

What Freedom Means to You (and Me)

By L.L. Barkat 15 Comments

What Does Freedom Mean mountains

What does freedom mean? L.L. Barkat considers the complications of this timeless question, in the company of tractor pulls, rifle shining, a trilling creek, and angora rabbit clouds.

Filed Under: Blog, Patriotism

Children’s Book Club: ‘Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl’

By Megan Willome 9 Comments

diary

If you read ‘Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl’ before 1998, you haven’t read the most complete version. Join us as we discuss the least-known parts of the world’s best-known diary.

Filed Under: Blog, book reviews, Children's Book Club

Random Highlights from Random Acts of Poetry Day

By Will Willingham 3 Comments

Random Acts of Poetry yellow flowers

We take stock of another richly celebrated Random Acts of Poetry Day with schools, city governments, libraries, refrigerators and … squirrels.

Filed Under: Blog, random acts of poetry

Traveling with Mark Twain and Eddy Harris on the Mississippi River

By Glynn Young 8 Comments

Canoe Mississippi River

Writer Eddy Harris canoed the Mississippi River in 1985, and he discovered that the river has its personality, its mood, and its conversations.

Filed Under: article, nature

“The School Boy,” by William Blake

The School Boy William Blake Illustration

< Return to William Blake Poems The School Boy I love to rise in a summer morn, When the birds sing on every tree; The distant huntsman winds his horn, And the sky-lark sings with me. O! what sweet company. But to go to school in a summer morn O: it drives all joy away; […]

Poetry Prompt: How-To Haiku

By Callie Feyen 3 Comments

What does it look like to listen?

How many ways are there to listen? How many ways are there to learn math? Can you write the instructions in the form of a haiku?

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

A Not So Random Act of Poetry: The Red Brick Poetry Box

By Megan Willome 3 Comments

Red Brick Wall With Hope Poetry

Put up a poetry box and participate in Random Acts of Poetry Day, October 3. Red Brick Poetry in Crafton, Pennsylvania, leads the way.

Filed Under: Blog, Poetry for Life

The Abounding Creativity of Middle-earth: An Appreciation of J.R.R. Tolkien

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

Coastline Tolkien Middle-earth

With his stories of Middle-earth, J.R.R. Tolkien gave us a legacy of abounding creativity and imagination, explaining how myths are made.

Filed Under: article, Books, Britain, Creativity, Fiction, Tolkien

Poetry Prompt: The Alphabet—Your Name

By Callie Feyen 8 Comments

Leave your handwriting everywhere.

What poetry hides in your name? Join Callie Feyen for poetry prompts that have to do with the letters that make up you!

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

The Last of the Tolkien Tales: “The Fall of Gondolin”

By Glynn Young 10 Comments

Mountains The Fall of Gondolin

“The Fall of Gondolin,” the last of the tales of J.R.R. Tolkien, includes all of the author’s trademark themes and devices, including orcs and balrogs.

Filed Under: Art, article, book reviews, Books, Tolkien

Great Friendship Tales: Shakespeare and ‘Exit, Pursued by a Bear’

By Megan Willome 6 Comments

cheerleader

Great friendship tales, like that of Hermione and Paulina from Shakespeare’s ‘The Winter’s Tale,’ live again in ‘Exit, Pursued by a Bear’ by E.K. Johnston.

Filed Under: Blog, Classic Plays, Friendship Project, Patron Only, Shakespeare

Memoir Notebook: Three Summers, Part 2: Bucking Hay

By Rick Maxson 9 Comments

Bucking Hay harvest

Richard Maxson continues his boyhood farming tale, reflecting on the harvest of transcendent memories cultivated in an alfalfa field.

Filed Under: Blog, Memoir Notebook, Patron Only

Poetry Prompt: Farm Blackout Poetry

By Callie Feyen 27 Comments

Found Poetry

Not sure where to begin when crafting a poem (or learning about a new concept)? Join Callie Feyen to write blackout poetry from new and unfamiliar material.

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

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Take How to Read a Poem

Get the Introduction, the Billy Collins poem, and Chapter 1

get the sample now

Welcome to Tweetspeak

New to Tweetspeak Poetry? Start here, in The Mischief Café. You're a regular? Check out our July Menu

Patron Love

❤️

Welcome a little patron love, when you help keep the world poetic.

The Graphic Novel

"Stunning, heartbreaking, and relevant illustrations"

Callie Feyen, teacher

read a summary of The Yellow Wallpaper

meet The Yellow Wallpaper characters

How to Write Poetry

Your Comments

  • Rick Maxson on Poet Laura: Poetry in Space
  • Laura Boggess on Poet Laura: Replenishing the Imagination
  • Sandra Fox Murphy on Poet Laura: Replenishing the Imagination
  • Glynn on Poets and Poems: Beth Copeland and “I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart”

Featured In

We're happy to have been featured in...

The Huffington Post

The Paris Review

The New York Observer

Tumblr Book News

Stay in Touch With Us

Browse by Topic

Learn to Write Form Poems

How to Write an Acrostic

How to Write a Ballad

How to Write a Catalog Poem

How to Write a Ghazal

How to Write a Haiku

How to Write an Ode

How to Write a Pantoum

How to Write a Rondeau

How to Write a Sestina

How to Write a Sonnet

How to Write a Villanelle

5 FREE POETRY PROMPTS

Get 5 FREE inbox poetry prompts from the popular book How to Write a Poem

Shakespeare Resources

Poetry Classroom: Sonnet 18

Common Core Picture Poems: Sonnet 73

Sonnet 104 Annotated

Sonnet 116 Annotated

Character Analysis: Romeo and Juliet

Character Analysis: Was Hamlet Sane or Insane?

Why Does Hamlet Wait to Kill the King?

10 Fun Shakespeare Resources

About Shakespeare: Poet and Playwright

Top 10 Shakespeare Sonnets

See all 154 Shakespeare sonnets in our Shakespeare Library!

Explore Work From Black Poets

About Us

  • • A Blessing for Writers
  • • Our Story
  • • Meet Our Team
  • • Literary Citizenship
  • • Poet Laura
  • • Poetry for Life: The 5 Vital Approaches
  • • T. S. Poetry Press – All Books
  • • Contact Us

Write With Us

  • • 5 FREE Poetry Prompts-Inbox Delivery
  • • 30 Days to Richer Writing Workshop
  • • Poetry Prompts
  • • Submissions
  • • The Write to Poetry

Read With Us

  • • All Our Books
  • • Book Club
  • • Every Day Poems—Subscribe! ✨
  • • Literacy Extras
  • • Poems to Listen By: Audio Series
  • • Poet-a-Day
  • • Poets and Poems
  • • 50 States Projects
  • • Charlotte Perkins Gilman Poems Library
  • • Edgar Allan Poe Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Blake Poems Arts & Experience Library
  • • William Shakespeare Sonnet Library

Celebrate With Us

  • • Poem on Your Pillow Day
  • • Poetic Earth Month
  • • Poet in a Cupcake Day
  • • Poetry at Work Day
  • • Random Acts of Poetry Day
  • • Take Your Poet to School Week
  • • Take Your Poet to Work Day

Gift Ideas

  • • Every Day Poems
  • • Our Shop
  • • Everybody Loves a Book!

Connect

  • • Donate
  • • Blog Buttons
  • • By Heart
  • • Shop for Tweetspeak Fun Stuff

Copyright © 2025 Tweetspeak Poetry · FAQ, Disclosure & Privacy Policy