800 results for: Poet
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Spoken word pioneer Kamau Daáood's 30-year retrospective of poetry.
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Dictionary Entries (7 more entries. View all »)
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
poet.
1.poetic.
2.poetical.
3.poetry.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
po·et    Audio Help   [poh-it] Pronunciation Key
–noun
1.a person who composes poetry.
2.a person who has the gift of poetic thought, imagination, and creation, together with eloquence of expression.

[Origin: 1250–1300; ME poete < L poéta < Gk poiéts poet, lit., maker, equiv. to poié-, var. s. of poieǐn to make + -tés agent n. suffix]

po·et·less, adjective
po·et·like, adjective

1. versifier, bard.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.

Thesaurus Entries
  Roget's II: The New ThesaurusCite This Source
Main Entry:  poet
Part of Speech:  noun
Definition:  One who writes poetry.
Synonyms:  bard, muse, poetaster, poetess, rhymer, rhymester, versifier
Source:  Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition
by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary.
Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
  Synonym Collection v1.1Cite This Source
Main Entry:  poet
Part of Speech:  noun
Synonyms:  artist, author, bard, minstrel, muse, poetaster, rhymer, rimer, troubadour, versifier, writer, balladist, idyllist, jongleur, laureate, lyricist, lyrist, odist, rhymster, scop
Source:  Synonym Collection v1.1
Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC.
Encyclopedia Articles (788 more entries. View all »)
Columbia Electronic EncyclopediaCite This Source


poet laureate, title conferred in Britain by the monarch on a poet whose duty it is to write commemorative odes and verse. It is an outgrowth of the medieval English custom of having versifiers and minstrels in the king's retinue, and of the later royal patronage of poets, such as Chaucer and Spenser. Ben Jonson seems to have had what amounted to the laureateship from Charles I in 1617, but the present title, adopted from the Greek and Roman custom of crowning with a wreath of laurel, was first given to John Dryden in 1670.

Dryden's successors have been Thomas Shadwell (1688-92), Nahum Tate (1692-1715), Nicholas Rowe (1715-18), Laurence Eusden (1718-30), Colley Cibber (1730-57), William Whitehead (1757-85), Thomas Warton (1785-90), Henry Pye (1790-1813), Robert Southey (1813-43), William Wordsworth (1843-50), Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1850-92), Alfred Austin (1892-1913), Robert Bridges (1913-30), John Masefield (1930-67), Cecil Day Lewis (1968-72), John Betjeman (1972-84), Ted Hughes (1984-98), and Andrew Motion (1999-). In recent years the position's ceremonial duties have largely been eliminated, and it is now no longer a lifetime post.

In the United States, the poet laureate is charged with raising "the national consciousness to a greater appreciation of the reading and writing of poetry." An annual position, chosen by the Librarian of Congress, it was instituted in 1937 as the consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress. this position was held by 30 poets before a 1985 act of congress changed the name to poet laureate. In 1986, Robert Penn Warren became the first to hold the title in United States. Since then, American poets laureate have been Richard Wilbur (1987-88), Howard Nemerov (1988-90), Mark Strand (1990-91), Joseph Brodsky (the first foreign-born laureate; 1991-92), Mona Van Duyn (the first woman laureate; 1992-93), Rita Dove (the first African-American laureate; 1993-95), Robert Hass (1995-97), Robert Pinsky (1997-2000), Stanley Kunitz (2000-2001), Billy Collins (2001-3), Louise Glück (2003-04), Ted Kooser (2004-06), and Donald Hall (2006-).

See K. Hopkins, The Poets Laureate (1954, repr. 1966).

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Licensed from Columbia University Press


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