Diane Lockward's Blog, page 43
January 5, 2011
Courting Creativity
I read Twyla Tharp's The Creative Habit with a red pen in hand as it became evident just a few pages in that I'd be making lots of margin notes. I want to share a baker's dozen of Tharp's ideas and words with you.
1. "Creativity is a habit, and the best creativity is a result of good work habits."
That seems like a contradiction, but it makes perfect sense. It also discredits the idea that inspiration strikes us unexpectedly and out of nowhere.
2. "The irony of multitasking is that it's exhausting. . . you're not doing anything excellently. You're compromising your virtuosity."
Multitasking keeps you from doing anything excellently. I love this thought! We are often so proud of ourselves for juggling many tasks simultaneously. Better, Tharp suggests, to concentrate on one thing at a time.
3. "Metaphor is the lifeblood of all art."
I've had a long-time affair with metaphors. I love them. It's what attracted me to the Renaissance and John Donne.
4. ". . . the real secret of creativity is to go back and remember."
I'm still mulling this one over. Seemingly a contradiction, but surely not as memory seems to incite invention.
5. "Before you can think out of the box, you have to start with a box."
Exceptionally cool thought. See picture above.
6. ". . . you don't have a really good idea until you combine two little ideas."
Perfect. Court the clash. The collision of opposites. Find a connection between seemingly unrelated ideas.
7. "Your creative endeavors can never be thoroughly mapped out ahead of time. You have to allow for the suddenly altered landscape, the change in plan, the accidental spark—and you have to see it as a stroke of luck rather than a disturbance of your perfect scheme."
I want that altered landscape. Take me off the mapped-out route.
8. "In creative endeavors luck is a skill."
We can make luck happen!
9. "Creativity is an act of defiance."
Again, the idea of collision. Look for trouble. Welcome it when it comes. At least when writing.
10. ". . . a generous spirit contributes to good luck."
Yes and yes again.
11. "You're only kidding yourself if you put creativity before craft. Craft is where our best efforts begin."
Students, are you paying attention?
12. "Without passion, all the skill in the world won't lift you above craft. Without skill, all the passion in the world will leave you eager but floundering. Combining the two is the essence of the creative life."
What could I add to this? Nothing.
13. "Failing, and learning from it, is necessary. Until you've done it, you're missing an important piece of your creative essence."
Suffer the pain; then cherish the failures.
Published on January 05, 2011 10:00
January 1, 2011
My Writing Resolutions
This year instead of creating a list of new resolutions for 2011, I've decided to revisit last year's list and see how I've done. What kind of progress have I made? Or failed to make? So here's last year's list with new thoughts added in italics.
1. Write on a more regular basis. Aim for three morning sessions per week. Show up at the kitchen table. Do chores later. Or not at all.
I've done very well in regards to ignoring chores. Not so hot on the regular writing. Definitely have fallen far short of the three mornings per week. I think I'll aim for a more realistic two sessions per week in 2011.
2. Remember that bad writing is better than no writing. It doesn't all have to be your best work. It can't be.
I've done both bad writing and no writing. I've got some new poems that I like, but am not satisfied with my productivity. Must do better in 2011.
3. Remember that the bad writing is clearing a space for the good writing that will soon follow. Believe that.
Oh, I do remember and I do believe. I really do. I have cleared a space. Must fill it.
4. Try more forms. Maybe a rondeau.
I've written one new sestina and one sonnenizio. No rondeau. Someone has challenged me to do a canzone. I will take up that challenge! Someone else has challenged me to do a double canzone. I think she's pushing things.
5. Buy as many collections by other poets as you can afford. Simply congratulating someone on his or her new book is not enough. Spread the word.
I pat myself on the back for outstanding achievement of #5. I have bought a boatload of poetry books—as you would know if you could see my kitchen table. I use my blog and my newsletter to spread the word. I am good.
6. Write at least two reviews this year. Minimum.
Done it! Yay for #6! And me!
7. Send out queries to community colleges requesting a reading and / or workshop.
Back to reality here. I tried a bunch. Most didn't even respond. I became discouraged and abandoned the effort. But if you'd like to have me at your school, just give a shout. Still happy to go. Have poems; will travel.
8. Be bolder about asking for an honorarium. What you do is worth something. If the answer is No, go anyhow as long as it doesn't kill your budget.
Does this count: I gave up a booking when the host lost his funding (due to some violation of rules on his part) and then withdrew the agreed-upon honorarium. A two-hour drive each way. So I said sorry, no can do. I've still done a number of freebies.
9. Remember that reading for free is better than not reading at all. Hope to gain new readers at the non-paying venues. Hope to have a good time. Support series that are just getting off the ground.
I remember. I sure do. Most of the readings have been fun. When they go well, I love doing them.
10. Be on the lookout for new subject matter.
I am good for #10. Ears always perked up, eyes open.
11. If you get a good line or phrase while watching TV or nodding off in your chair, write it down. Don't count on your memory. That good idea will be gone by morning.
I now keep a little notebook on the shelf next to my comfortable chair. I've added a bunch of ideas to it as well as to my kitchen table little notebook. Now must use them in regards to #1 above.
12. If your husband keeps interrupting while you are revising, politely ask him to stop.
Should I just give up on this one? He continues to interrupt. I ask him politely (usually) to stop. He stops. Then a few weeks later, he starts all over again. Bummer. 90% of these interruptions are to read me something from the newspaper. Each interruption is preceded by a little Hm noise of astonishment which thus constitutes a double interruption.
13. Work hard for your new book. But put the emphasis on fun. Enjoy it.
I give myself an A here. I have worked hard for the new book and have definitely enjoyed it so far. I am immensely grateful for all the support and interest, a good deal of it from friends I've acquired through this blog. Thank you! And Happy New Year and much writing success to all.
Published on January 01, 2011 04:05
December 26, 2010
Do a Verb
I just finished reading Twyla Tharp's The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life. I loved this book and will likely have more to say about it at another time, but for now I want to say that one of the aspects of the book I enjoyed was that so much of what Tharp says about her life and work as a dancer has parallels to the life and work of a poet. For example, some of her strategies for getting herself out of a creative slump could easily work for poets.One activity Tharp uses to get out of a creative dead end is called "Do a Verb." She chooses a verb and acts it out physically. For example, the verb squirm leads to wiggling her hips, shrugging her shoulders, and moving her limbs in such a way that a "dance phrase" gets underway. She videotapes the process and when she plays back the video, she invariably finds something "strange and new" that revs up her dance engine.
I think that we poets could translate this exercise to poetry. Choose a verb and free write about it for five minutes. See what emerges. Or begin literally with the physical, as a dancer would. Then write about that.
Some verbs suggested by Tharp: dart, twirl, chafe. Then there is her "Civilian Big Ten," verbs consistently suggested by groups she's worked with: push, spin, run, jump, twist, roll, skip, turn, walk, fall. But feel free to choose your own verb, a snazzy one or an ordinary one.
This activity might be a good way to end 2010 or to begin 2011. Or both.
Click for Amazon
Published on December 26, 2010 11:11
December 22, 2010
Yes, Virginia
Each Christmas I like to revisit the following essay from the The Sun. My grandmother read it to me many years ago. I've always remembered it. If you don't already know this piece, I hope you'll enjoy it. I also hope you'll have a Merry Christmas if that's what you're celebrating. And I hope you'll have a wonderful New Year. Thank you for being a Blogalicious reader.
Eight-year-old Virginia O'Hanlon wrote a letter to the editor of New York's The Sun, and the quick response was printed as an unsigned editorial September 21, 1897. The work of veteran newsman Francis Pharcellus Church has since become history's most reprinted newspaper editorial, appearing in part or whole in dozens of languages in books, movies, and other editorials, and on posters and stamps.
Here's Virginia's letter:
"DEAR EDITOR: I am 8 years old.
"Some of my little friends say there is no Santa Claus.
"Papa says, 'If you see it in THE SUN it's so.'
"Please tell me the truth; is there a Santa Claus?
"VIRGINIA O'HANLON.
"115 WEST NINETY-FIFTH STREET."
Here's the reply:
VIRGINIA, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except what they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men's or children's, are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge.
Yes, VIRGINIA, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no VIRGINIAS. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.
Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies! You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but that's no proof that they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world.
You may tear apart the baby's rattle and see what makes the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance, can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, VIRGINIA, in all this world there is nothing else real and abiding.
No Santa Claus! Thank God! he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood.
Published on December 22, 2010 07:00
December 17, 2010
Review of The Working Poet
Click for AmazonLast year I reviewed The Working Poet, edited by Scott Minar and published by Autumn House Press. I love this book. It's loaded with wonderful prompts for new poems. I have two exercises in the book, each with a sample poem. I'm joined by a few dozen other poets whose prompts and poems have stimulated some new poems for me. I'm sure the book would do the same for you.
I was delighted to see this brief review in the current issue of The Bloomsbury Review. I agree completely with the recommendation made in the last sentence. But you don't have to be in a classroom to use the book. You can use it to home school yourself. If you don't yet own this, now is the time to treat yourself.
Published on December 17, 2010 08:00
December 14, 2010
My Secrets Revealed at Pif Magazine
I was recently interviewed by Derek Alger for Pif Magazine. The interview appears in the December issue. Derek works in a somewhat unusual manner. In the past the interviewer has sent me questions via email, sometimes a few at a time but usually all at once. I then responded to the questions and sent them back. But Derek wanted to talk first on the telephone. We made a phone date and then chatted for over an hour. A week later Derek emailed his topics, not really questions, with some notes on what I'd said on the phone. He told me to respond any way I wanted. So I incorporated some of his / my notes and took off from there.
Some of the topics covered are the public response to my new book, my experience at a recent reading and makes for a good reading, my late bloomer status, graduate school, my David Copperfield childhood, teaching, my first two books, time spent at The Frost Place, my current work in poetry.
I am grateful to Derek for doing the interview. You can read the interview here.
Published on December 14, 2010 06:00
December 11, 2010
Surprise Review of What Feeds Us
I didn't expect to get any more reviews of my second book, What Feeds Us, so it was just delightful to learn that Sheila Bender had reviewed the book in her magazine, Writing It Real. This is a subscription only online publication, but occasionally there's an issue that includes non-subscribers. The review appears in one of those issues.Sheila gives a generous overview of the collection, then zeroes in on three poems: "Love Test: A Ghazal," "Blueberry," and "Idiosyncrasies of the Body." Since Writing It Real is a newsletter that goes to writers, the review is followed by three prompts, one based on each of the three poems. There's also a blog where people can leave comments.
Here's a bit from the Introduction:
"A 2006 Quentin R. Howard Poetry Prize winner, the volume is as witty as it is heartbreaking. Diane's poems draw her readers in as they transform visits to the hair dresser, eating pickles as a child, wanting more out of a marriage as a husband brings in cold pizza on a snowy night, being stung by a bee and tended to lovingly, looking at blueberries in her kitchen, noticing an announcement about a coming test, or having an MRI and dreading the results into moments of revelation and introspection. Diane's gift for melding observations of food she prepares, activities in her life, and notions of her own and others with her deepest longings and fears reaches fully into the heart."
You can read the entire review here. I love this review!
You might be interested in subscribing to Writing It Real. It costs $30 per year. Sheila is an experienced poet, prose writer, editor, and teacher.
Here are some of the Subscriber Benefits:
Links to each new article emailed every Thursday
Access over five years of weekly articles in our archives
Read any article online or download the print version
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Read some Free sample articles.
Consider treating some writer you know to a subscription. Consider treating yourself to a subscription.
Published on December 11, 2010 06:14
December 9, 2010
Invitation to a Reading
If you're in the Philadelphia area, please join us. It sounds like fun.
A LITTLE WINTER MADNESS: A SAMPLING OF MAD POETS AND MUSICIANS
On Saturday, December 11, 2010, the Mad Poets Society will present a special music and poetry reading, "A Little Winter Madness: A Sampling of Mad Poets," featuring four poets and three musicians.
Media Borough Hall in the Mansion Parlor 3rd and Jackson StreetsMedia, PA
7:00 p.m.hosted by Media poet Brian Sammond
The four featured poets are Thaddeus Rutkowski, Diane Lockward, Gloria Parker and Jason Fritz.
The featured musicians are renowned local singer-songwriter, Tom Mullian, and the talented duo, "Silver Wind," comprised of Mike Mascia on American Indian flute and Jackie Neuman on guitar.
For further information about this event: Mad Poets Society
A LITTLE WINTER MADNESS: A SAMPLING OF MAD POETS AND MUSICIANS
On Saturday, December 11, 2010, the Mad Poets Society will present a special music and poetry reading, "A Little Winter Madness: A Sampling of Mad Poets," featuring four poets and three musicians.
Media Borough Hall in the Mansion Parlor 3rd and Jackson StreetsMedia, PA
7:00 p.m.hosted by Media poet Brian Sammond
The four featured poets are Thaddeus Rutkowski, Diane Lockward, Gloria Parker and Jason Fritz.
The featured musicians are renowned local singer-songwriter, Tom Mullian, and the talented duo, "Silver Wind," comprised of Mike Mascia on American Indian flute and Jackie Neuman on guitar.
For further information about this event: Mad Poets Society
Published on December 09, 2010 03:59
December 6, 2010
In Search of Holiday Cheer
I went to the mall this morning and tried to get into a holiday spirit. It didn't work. The Short Hills Mall is beautiful and there's covered parking which is great on a cold day with bits of white stuff coming out of the sky. But the Santa display was all blocked off with huge plexiglass cases. I couldn't see the little kids with Santa or any of the Christmas display. Bah humbug. Then Macy's—ugh, what a nightmare! Get me outta there, fast! Is there some reason why Macy's has to have the heat up so high and the perfume in the air so thick?Okay, I got that out of my system. Now onto far cooler stuff.
This weekend poet and blogger Kristin Berkey-Abbott added this post to her blog: "Favorite Poetry Books of 2010: Add These Books to Your Shopping List." I like the imperative that comes after her title's colon. I also like having my own Temptation by Water on that list! My book is keeping good company on this list. Several of the books I already own and can add my recommendation to Kristin's: Letters from the Emily Dickinson Room, by Kelli Russell Agodon; I Am the Jukebox, by Sandra Beasley; Unmentionables, by Beth Ann Fennelly; Underlife, by January O'Neil; and The Alchemist's Kitchen, by Susan Rich. Kristin's list sent me over to Amazon where I ordered Poetry in Person, edited by Alexander Neubauer. I've added a few of the other titles to my next order list.
The list put a smile on my face and so did reading these words in Kristin's post: "And as I chose this list, I couldn't help but notice how every book but the one by Kamiko Hahn came to my attention because of blogs. With several books, I already knew about the poet (again, usually because of stumbling across their blog), and I had the pleasure of watching the book publishing process of the book on the list below (author photos, blurbs, promotional videos, book covers—a wealth of information on various blogs). So if you ever wonder if your time spent writing a blog is worthwhile, I would say yes!"
That's been my experience, too, as a poet who blogs. The circle has widened. I've become part of an ever-growing community of poets. I've read books by poets I've met in this circle, and I know that some of them have, in turn, supported my work.
Also putting a smile on my face today is a nice mention in The Caldwells Patch "About Town" feature. If you are not familiar with patch.com, it's an online newspaper spreading like wildfire throughout the US. Many towns now have their own "patch" where residents can find up-to-the-minute news, information about local events, restaurant listings, and so on. Today's "About Town" feature is Good Books, Good Deeds. The reporter recommends my new book, gives a bit of information about me, and provides a cover image. I wonder if this means that I will now be recognized at the Foodtown.
The next recommendation in the article is the Alhambra Poetry Calendar that I blogged about on Saturday. The reporter learned about the Calendar from my blog. Another example of how effective blogs can be in spreading the word about poetry, poets, and books. And calendars.
Speaking of restaurants, while you're visiting The Caldwells Patch, check out this review of my husband's restaurant, The Fieldhouse Pub, in Fairfield, NJ. We love this review! Also check out the virtual tour (just click on the small video image). I made this video and must say I'm rather proud of my work. I used Animoto, a wonderful program for video-making.
Published on December 06, 2010 11:48
December 4, 2010
Holiday Gift Idea
Need an idea for a great holiday gift for someone who appreciates poetry? This calendar can sit on a desk or a table, at home or at work. It offers an ideal way to begin the day or end it. No need to check a website or inbox for your daily poem.
Alhambra's stand-up desk calendar for 2011 contains 365 classical and contemporary poems by more than 300 poets. Poetry from different eras and poetry movements is included, with a particular emphasis on contemporary poetry. The calendars are bound in a spiral, so there is no need to tear off pages and they can be used later as a reference book.
The calendar comes in English, French, and Deutsch. It's priced at $29.95. That might seem expensive, but calculate how much that comes to per poem and you'll see that it's a major bargain. You can order the calendar from Alhambra or from the Academy of American Poets.
When you're deciding who should receive this lovely gift, don't forget to ask for one for yourself!
I've been in this calendar all but one of the years since it first appeared. Two years ago I read with a group of calendar poets at the Bowery Poetry Club in NYC and had the pleasure of meeting Shafiq Naz, the creator of the calendar. My poem this year is "Weather Report," from my book, Temptation by Water. As always, I'm delighted to be part of this beautiful project. Here's the list of all the poets included in the 2011 calendar:
DANNIE ABSE · JOSEPH ADDISON · KIM ADDONIZIO · SANDRA ALCOSSER · MONIZA ALVI · NIN ANDREWS · ANTONELLA ANEDDA · RAE ARMANTROUT · MATTHEW ARNOLD · ROSE AUSLÄNDER · ROBERT BAGG · DAVID BAKER · CHRISTIANNE BALK · MARY JO BANG · ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD · DAVID BARBER · ELLEN BASS · THOMAS BASTARD · DEREK BEAULIEU · FRANCIS BEAUMONT · THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES · JACK B. BEDELL · APHRA BEHN · LINDA BIERDS · DAVID BIESPIEL · KATE BINGHAM · WILLIAM BLAKE · ADRIAN BLEVINS · ROBERT BLY · EAVAN BOLAND · STEPHANIE BOLSTER · TODD BOSS · ANNE BRADSTREET · GEOFFREY BROCK · PATRICIA BRODY · EMILY BRONTË · RUPERT BROOKE · JOEL BROUWER · ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING · ROBERT BROWNING · ALAN BROWNJOHN · COLETTE BRYCE · ROBERT BURNS · SAMUEL BUTLER · KATHRYN STRIPLING BYER · THOMAS CAMPION · THOMAS CAREW · CATHERINE CARTER · CAROLINE CARVER · CHRISTINE CASSON · MARGARET CAVENDISH · ANN CEFOLA · LYNN CHANDHOK · GEORGE CHAPMAN · GEOFFREY CHAUCER · JOHN CLARE · GEORGE ELLIOTT CLARKE · SUZANNE CLEARY · ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH · SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE · BILLY COLLINS · DAVID CONSTANTINE · TRISTAN CORBIÈRE · CHARLES COTTON · WILLIAM COWPER · HART CRANE · BARBARA CROOKER · SAMUEL DANIEL · JOHN DAVIES · JON DAVIS · GREG DELANTY · EMILY DICKINSON · FRED DINGS · GREGORY DJANIKIAN · JOHN DONNE · ERNEST DOWSON · WILLIAM DRUMMOND · SASHA DUGDALE · DENISE DUHAMEL · IAN DUHIG · PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR · LADY CATHERINE DYER · ELIZABETH I · ALISTAIR ELLIOT · CLAUDIA EMERSON · RALPH WALDO EMERSON · FAIZ AHMAD FAIZ · EDWARD FIELD · MARTIN FIGURA · ROY FISHER · EDWARD FITZGERALD · JAMES ELROY FLECKER · JOHN FULLER · GEORGE GASCOIGNE · JOHN GAY · DOREEN GILDROY · MARIA MAZZIOTTI GILLAN · DANA GIOIA · OLIVER GOLDSMITH · GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON · THOMAS GRAY · JAMES GREENE · DORA GREENWELL · LINDA GREGERSON · EAMON GRENNAN · FULKE GREVILLE, LORD BROOKE · JANE GRIFFITHS · KELLE GROOM · IVOR GURNEY · JENNIFER HABEL · MARILYN HACKER · RACHEL HADAS · MARIAN HADDAD · HAFIZ · KIMIKO HAHN · DANIEL HALL · JOSEPH HALL · SOPHIE HANNAH · THOMAS HARDY · JOY HARJO · JAMES HARMS · JEFFREY HARRISON · DAVID HARSENT · DOLORES HAYDEN · FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS · WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY · JOHN HENNESSY · JAMES HENRY · GEORGE HERBERT · DAVID HERNANDEZ · ROBERT HERRICK · BOB HICOK · BRENDA HILLMAN · EDWARD HIRSCH · JANE HIRSHFIELD · H. L. HIX · TONY HOAGLAND · OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES · THOMAS HOOD · PAUL HOOVER · GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS · JOHN HOPPENTHALER · JOHN HOSKINS · A. E. HOUSMAN · HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY · ANDREW HUDGINS · GLYN HUGHES · LEIGH HUNT · MARK IRWIN · HELEN IVORY · MAJOR JACKSON · AMANDA JERNIGAN · LIONEL JOHNSON · SAMUEL JOHNSON · DEVIN JOHNSTON · LIBBY FALK JONES · BEN JONSON · MARILYN KALLET · ALICE KAVOUNA · JOHN KEATS · BRIGIT PEGEEN KELLY · X. J. KENNEDY · HENRY KING · SUSAN KINSOLVING · DEBORAH LANDAU · WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR · D. H. LAWRENCE · EMMA LAZARUS · SYDNEY LEA · EDWARD LEAR · ELEANOR LERMAN · PHILLIS LEVIN · TIM LIARDET · SARAH LINDSAY · TOMOTHY LIU · DIANE LOCKWARD · WILLIAM LOGAN · HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW · RICHARD LOVELACE · AMY LOWELL · JOHN LYLY · KATHLEEN LYNCH · MARWAN MAKHOUL · RANDALL MANN · CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE · RICHARD MARTIN · ANDREW MARVELL · DAVID MASON · HAROLD MASSINGHAM · JOHN MCCREA · GARDNER MCFALL · JAMIE MCKENDRICK · JOSHUA MEHIGAN · ERIKA MEITNER · HERMAN MELVILLE · RICHARD MICHELSON · JOHN MILTON · ROBERT MINHINNICK · CAROL MOLDAW · LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU · ESTHER MORGAN · SIMONE MUENCH · PAUL MULDOON · RICHARD NEWMAN · AIMEE NEZHUKUMATATHIL · BARBARA NICKEL · EDWARD NOBLES · JEAN NORDHAUS · CHRISTOPHER NORTH · KATHERINE NORTHROP · D. NURKSE · NAOMI SHIHAB NYE · KEVIN O'CONNOR · JOHN O'KEEFE · WILFRED OWEN · ERIC PANKEY · JAY PARINI · ELISE PARTRIDGE · LINDA PASTAN · COVENTRY PATMORE · MOLLY PEACOCK · PASCALE PETIT · KATHERINE PHILIPS · CHRISTOPHER PILLING · ROBERT PINSKY · DONALD O. PLATT · STANLEY PLUMLY · EDGAR ALLAN POE · ALEXANDER POPE · JACQUELYN POPE · PETER PORTER · D. A. POWELL · NEIL POWELL · MATTHEW PRIOR · SIMON RAE · SIR WALTER RALEGH · JACQUES RÉDA · JAMES RICHARDSON · ATSURO RILEY · ROBIN ROBERTSON · PETER ROBINSON · DAVID RODERICK · PADRAIG ROONEY · ISAAC ROSENBERG · J. ALLYN ROSSER · CHRISTINA ROSSETTI · DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI · MICHAEL RYAN · LAWRENCE SAIL · FIONA SAMPSON · REG SANER · ROBERT SAXTON · GRACE SCHULMAN · SIR WALTER SCOTT · CHARLES SEDLEY · WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE · RAVI SHANKAR · DON SHARE · PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY · RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN · ANDREW SHIELDS · VIVIAN SHIPLEY · JAMES SHIRLEY · PEGGY SHUMAKER · PENELOPE SHUTTLE · SIR PHILIP SIDNEY · JOHN SKELTON · ED SKOOG · R. T. SMITH · THOMAS R. SMITH · EDMUND SPENSER · ELIZABETH SPIRES · A. E. STALLINGS · PAGE HILL STARZINGER · DABNEY STUART · MATTHEW SWEENEY · JONATHAN SWIFT · ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE · ARTHUR SZE · GEORGE SZIRTES · EDWARD TAYLOR · MARILYN L. TAYLOR · SARA TEASDALE · ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON · EDWARD THOMAS · JEFFREY THOMSON · HENRY DAVID THOREAU · ADAM THORPE · RICHARD TILLINGHAST · DANIEL TOBIN · RHETT ISEMAN TRULL · GEORGE TUBERVILLE · BRIAN TURNER · THOMAS TUSSER · CODY WALKER · SUE WALKER · ROSANNA WARREN · MICHAEL WATERS · ELLEN DORÉ WATSON · JOHN WEBSTER · WALT WHITMAN · SUSAN WICKS · ELLA WHEELER WILCOX · C. K. WILLIAMS · HUGO WILLIAMS · WENDY WILLIS · JOHN WILMOT, EARL OF ROCHESTER · ELEANOR WILNER · CHRISTIAN WIMAN · TERRI WITEK · ANNE FINCH, COUNTESS OF WINCHILSEA · CECILIA WOLOCH · WILLIAM WORDSWORTH · BARON WORMSER · SIR HENRY WOTTON · MARY WROTH · SIR THOMAS WYATT · ELINOR WYLIE · WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS · STEPHEN YENSER · GARY YOUNG · ISABEL ZUBER
Published on December 04, 2010 08:05


