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Search Results for: shakespeare

Poet-a-Day: Meet Susan Rothbard

By Tania Runyan 5 Comments

apple blossom Washington DC-apple poem Susan Rothbard

When you think you’re grounded in reality, a form like the sonnet might lead you to the imaginary. It did for Susan Rothbard in her apple poem!

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Sonnets

Poet-a-Day: Meet Richard Pierce

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Tall grass in sunset

Can the villanelle come round again? Poet Richard Pierce responds to Dylan Thomas’s famous villanelle with a powerful one of his own.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Poet-a-Day, poetry teaching resources, Villanelles

Poetry Prompt: A spiral staircase, anxiety, and the sestina

By Callie Feyen 34 Comments

What can a spiral show us?

Join Callie Feyen and walk a spiral staircase with Tania Runyan, poet and author of “How to Write a Form Poem,” in order to understand the sestina.

Filed Under: Blog, poetry prompt, poetry teaching resources, Sestina, Shakespeare, william shakespeare, writer's group resources, writing prompt, writing prompts

Poets and Poems: Brad Lussier and “How Does He Love Me?”

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

The 47 sonnets of “How Does He Love Me?” by Brad Lussier remind us that love is transcendent, eternal and unchanging.

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

An Epic Told in 500 Sonnets: “The Gift of Life” by Amanda Hall

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

In “The Gift of Life: An Epic in Verse,” poet Amanda Hall employs some 500 sonnets to tell a story of love amid contemporary life and culture.

Filed Under: article, love poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets, Sonnets

Reading Generously: ‘How to Write a Form Poem’ by Tania Runyan

By Megan Willome 4 Comments

orange fruit on a branch

Form poetry: not just for grad school anymore. Welcome to your guided tour of ‘How to Write a Form Poem,’ by Tania Runyan.

Filed Under: Blog, How to Write a Form Poem, Reading Generously

How to Write a Form Poem: A Guided Tour of 10 Fabulous Forms

By Leave a Comment

How to Write a Form Poem Cover-367

An inspiring poetry handbook Are you looking for a poetry handbook—one that will spark your imagination and guide you in the pleasures of writing poetry with heart and soul? Explore this inspiring “workshop in a book.” No matter your level, you can make poems that express more deeply and impact more richly. Poems to keep. […]

Julius Caesar: Et Tu, Brute? Opposite Day and the Ides of March

By Tania Runyan 2 Comments

Purple grapes on vine for Julius Caesar

For the Ides of March, Tania Runyan has a Julius Caesar “Opposite Day” poetry prompt.

Filed Under: Blog, Classic Plays, English Teaching Resources, poetry prompt, Shakespeare, writing prompt, writing prompts

Poetry Prompt: Unhoped Joy

By Callie Feyen 7 Comments

Where this week, will you find joy unhoped for?

What does joy that is unhoped for look like? Join author Callie Feyen as she explores the warmth of gloves and other gifts from the pandemic.

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

Poet Laura: Poultry Poetry—Feeding Grapes and Reading Sonnets to Chickens

By Laura Boggess 2 Comments

Water Droplets on grapes

This month, our intrepid Poet Laura visits chickens on a chilly day, bearing delicious grapes and heartfelt sonnets.

Filed Under: Blog, Chicken poems, Poet Laura, Shakespeare, shakespeare poems, shakespeare sonnets, Sonnets

Poets and Poems: James Matthew Wilson and “The Strangeness of the Good”

By Glynn Young Leave a Comment

“The Strangeness of the Good” by James Matthew Wilson celebrates the things in life that endure and that we share in our common humanity.

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

Generosity with Self: When You’re In The Wrong Story

By Callie Feyen 7 Comments

Tuscany landscape for Henry VI & Generosity

Callie Feyen reflects on Henry VI and encourages Winchester to be generous enough with himself to leave when he’s in the wrong story.

Filed Under: Blog, Generous, Shakespeare

A Book of Poetry by Edna St. Vincent Millay Finds Its Way Home

By Glynn Young 2 Comments

A 1927 book of poetry by Edna St. Vincent Millay finds its way home to the family of the original owner.

Filed Under: article, Books, poetry, Poets

Poetry Prompt: ‘Twelfth Night’ and the Fool

By Callie Feyen 3 Comments

What do you do when reading (or living) a difficult story? Callie Feyen suggests you consider poetry and Shakespeare’s Fool from ‘Twelfth Night.’

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

Poets and Poems: A.M. Juster and “Wonder & Wrath”

By Glynn Young 7 Comments

“Wonder & Wrath,” the ninth poetry collection by A.M. Juster, is alternately serious and playful, written by a master of formalism.

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

Robert Hudson Explains the House Fly — and Poetry

By Glynn Young 5 Comments

In “The Poet and the Fly,” Robert Hudson considers seven poets and how they used the common house fly to develop their themes.

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

A Ritual to Read to Each Other: Introducing ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ Book Club

By Megan Willome 7 Comments

Madeleine L'Engle

Stand with those who fight: Shakespeare, Bach, and Meg Murry. Join our October book club as we read Madeleine L’Engle’s ‘A Wrinkle in Time.’

Filed Under: A Ritual to Read to Each Other, A Story in Every Soul, Blog, book club

Shakeapeare Sonnet CXXII (122): Thy gift, thy tables, are within my brain

< Return to all 154 William Shakespeare Sonnets Sonnet CXXII (122) Thy gift, thy tables, are within my brain Full character’d with lasting memory, Which shall above that idle rank remain Beyond all date, even to eternity; Or at the least, so long as brain and heart Have faculty by nature to subsist; Till each […]

“30 Poems to Memorize (Before It’s Too Late)” by David Kern

By Glynn Young 15 Comments

In “30 Poems to Memorize (Before It’s Too Late),” editor David Kern and 13 other contributors remind us of why we love poetry.

Filed Under: article, book reviews, Books, Memory, Poems, poetry, Poetry Memorization, Poets

10 Ways to Be a Totally Epic Literary Citizen

By L.L. Barkat 6 Comments

Maybe you’ve heard the concept of being a literary citizen? We’re taking it further, making it epic and inspiring. Come along if you want to dream and *be.*

Filed Under: Blog, Literary Citizen

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