
"The poor poet"
A 'poet' is a person who writes
poetry. This is usually influenced by a
cultural and intellectual
tradition. Some consider the best
poetry to be, to some extent, and universal, and to address issues common to all
humanity; others are more absorbed by its particular, personal and ephemeral qualities.
In the
English language, poets generally considered to be of the most influential and profound include
Chaucer,
Shakespeare,
John Milton,
William Blake,
John Keats,
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Emily Dickinson,
Walt Whitman,
W. B. Yeats,
T. S. Eliot,
Ezra Pound,
Elizabeth Bishop and
Sylvia Plath. American poet
Walt Whitman was one of the first poets to write a kind of poetry now called
free verse, though French poet
Jules Laforgue was also writing in free verse around the same time as Whitman. Free verse differed from traditional verse because it was not bound by rhyme or meter. In the Western tradition,
Homer,
Sappho,
Virgil,
Dante,
Luís Vaz de Camões,
Fernando Pessoa and
Goethe round out a basic list. In Chinese,
Li Bai,
Du Fu and other Tang dynasty poets produced some the oldest poetry in the world, which is still read today.
Basho,
Omar Khayyám, and
Rumi complete one defensible
canon.
See also