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  2. Cinquain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinquain

    a nine-line syllabic form with the pattern two, four, six, eight, two, eight, six, four, two. Crown cinquain. a sequence of five cinquain stanzas functioning to construct one larger poem. Garland cinquain. a series of six cinquains in which the last is formed of lines from the preceding five, typically line one from stanza one, line two from ...

  3. Quintain (poetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintain_(poetry)

    Quintain (poetry) A quintain or pentastich is any poetic form containing five lines. Examples include the tanka, the cinquain, the quintilla, Shakespeare's Sonnet 99, and the limerick .

  4. The Road Not Taken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_Not_Taken

    The poem consists of four stanzas of five lines each. With the rhyme scheme as ABAAB, the first line rhymes with the third and fourth, and the second line rhymes with the fifth. The meter is iambic tetrameter, with each line having four two-syllable feet, though in almost every line, in different positions, an iamb is replaced with an anapest.

  5. Metaphysical poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphysical_poets

    The poet Abraham Cowley, in whose biography Samuel Johnson first named and described Metaphysical poetry. The term Metaphysical poets was coined by the critic Samuel Johnson to describe a loose group of 17th-century English poets whose work was characterised by the inventive use of conceits, and by a greater emphasis on the spoken rather than lyrical quality of their verse.

  6. List of poetry groups and movements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_poetry_groups_and...

    The Minimalism is an avantgardist artistic, dramatic and literary movement in the late 1960s and '70s U.S. emerged, is characterized by an economy with words and a focus on surface description. The poets who identified with it are Samuel Beckett, Grace Paley, Raymond Carver, Robert Grenier, Aram Saroyan, and Jon Fosse.

  7. English poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_poetry

    The earliest English poetry. The earliest known English poem is a hymn on the creation; Bede attributes this to Cædmon ( fl. 658–680), who was, according to legend, an illiterate herdsman who produced extemporaneous poetry at a monastery at Whitby. This is generally taken as marking the beginning of Anglo-Saxon poetry.

  8. Shakespeare's sonnets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare's_sonnets

    Context. Shakespeare's sonnets are considered a continuation of the sonnet tradition that swept through the Renaissance from Petrarch in 14th-century Italy and was finally introduced in 16th-century England by Thomas Wyatt and was given its rhyming metre and division into quatrains by Henry Howard. With few exceptions, Shakespeare's sonnets ...

  9. The New Poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Poetry

    The New Poetry. First edition. The New Poetry is a poetry anthology edited by Al Alvarez, published in 1962 and in a revised edition in 1966. It was greeted at the time as a significant review of the post-war scene in English poetry . The introduction, written by Alvarez, is an essay called The New Poetry or Beyond the Gentility Principle.