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Favourite poets.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-01 7:44

So who are your favourite poets /book/?

When I'm asked, I usually say Tennyson or Bukowski, depends on the mood I'm in.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-01 10:12

Well, it's not like I've read any more than one poem by any given poet that I like. Maybe Keats

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-01 14:29

No matter how many poetry courses I have taken or books I have read, my answer remains the same: Shel Silverstein.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-01 16:07

Robert Frost.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-02 21:50

Yeats or Poe.  Then of course, there's Neruda (everyone likes Neruda), and Plath was pretty good too.

But I suppose that the number one spot should go to Dr. Seuss.  Not only did he write pure rhyming nonsense, but he convinced an entire nation that the nonsense was actually good for children to read.  10 points for his mastery of bullshit.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-03 13:56

Edward Lear or Dr. Seuss.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-04 8:54

Giacomo Leopardi.

L'infinito

"Sempre caro mi fu quest'ermo colle,
e questa siepe, che da tanta parte
dell'ultimo orizzonte il guardo esclude.
Ma sedendo e mirando, interminati
spazi di là da quella, e sovrumani
silenzi, e profondissima quïete
io nel pensier mi fingo, ove per poco
il cor non si spaura. E come il vento
odo stormir tra queste piante, io quello
infinito silenzio a questa voce
vo comparando: e mi sovvien l'eterno,
e le morte stagioni, e la presente
e viva, e il suon di lei. Così tra questa
immensità s'annega il pensier mio:
e il naufragar m'è dolce in questo mare"

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-07 7:15

Rumi

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-08 22:59

This is my first time on /book/.

Yeats? Bukowski? Tennyson? I like this place.

Is saying John Berryman going to get me kicked out?

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-08 23:17

T.S. Eliot.

I also like Ginsberg, but none of the other beats.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-09 5:45

>>10
T.S. Eliot.
Haha. Yeah, sure.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-09 13:09

>>11
Sounds like your one of those losers that's in a gang, piece of shit, hahahah funny that. fucken loser.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-10 11:23

>>9

On the contrary, anon, Berryman is enjoyable :) Welcome to /book/, I'm sure it take stronger hold on your heart than any other board on 4chan... if you're well-read and genuinely enjoy literary discussion :)

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-10 11:23

>>13
 *it'll

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-10 13:26

>>13
>I'm sure it take stronger hold

im lolling all over your writing

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-10 15:49

>>15

He corrected himself.

Also, I'm not im.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-11 2:19

>>13 That's good to know, I think I'll stick around. Also >>15 you sure showed him! Only two hours after he corrected himself!

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-11 3:37

You can't edit posts on 4chan.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-18 12:49

Rimbaud

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-19 6:11

Baudelaire

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-19 12:33

2 pac

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-19 17:35

Rimbaud, Baudelaire, im new to /book/ too, and I already feel im going to love this place.
Except for the grammar fights, that's silly guys quit it

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-20 5:44

Anyone here like Billy Collins? It's the only American poet I know quite well. (Native favorites are Ingmar Heytze, Arjen Duinker and Jan Hanlo)

Besides, do you people genuinely like classic poetry like Yeats and Rimbaud? Cos it's so damn hard to get into, even if it sounds nice. (I'll make an exception for Baudelaire, he is just cool)

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-20 10:30

>>24
what does classic have to do with it

haha my fav. poet? Shakespeare!

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-20 14:28

The only poets with which I have any real experience are Herbert and Donne, so I suppose I'll say them, even though I don't really care for Donne so much. Donne is often cringe inducingly self-absrobed and pathetic in his depression, Herbert is at least interesting.

I personally have little experience with genuine enjoyment of the poetry of Yeats, or Wordsworth or Tennyson or Byron. And I'm not just being savage. Whilst I'm sure that if I were to study them in depth I would find something I could relate to, there is nothing on the surface to compell me to do so. I have no real interest in the romantic poets. Having said that I have no real interest in the metaphysical poets, but then, I was forced to study them.

Name: Anonymous 2009-09-29 19:38

e. e. cummings

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-01 11:58

My favourite poem.
"Roses are red, violets are blue,
I'm using my hand,
But I'm thinking of you"

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-01 12:17

Coeds are Sexy, My balls are blue
I'm using my hand,
But I'm thinking of you

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-03 0:02

Ezra Pound, working my way through the Cantos and loving it. I've gone back to some of his translations of Arnaut Daniel and some troubadour poetry, all fucking brilliant

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-04 16:44

>>25
Shakespeare is heavy handed and kind of droll in my opinion.
Whatever floats your boat though.

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-04 16:44

Where is a good place to start for someone new to Bukowski?

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-04 21:41

cummings

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-04 22:01

i am cummings in your anus

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-18 14:00

>>32
In my opinion, you're an idiot.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-18 23:07

>>36
And idiot.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-18 23:23

>>24
Of course I like Billy Collins.

Cate Kennedy.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-23 21:46

Langston Hughes

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 7:58

Ginsberg.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 8:20

>>40
How old are you 12? Its either that or you're clearly retarded either way. I'd rather be 5ft 6 than be as retarded as you.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 8:26

>>41
>Its either that or you're clearly retarded either way.

I'd work on my English if I were you. Especially if you plan on calling any more people retards.

Also, Ginsberg is a fine poet. I am not going to let scarf-wearing hipster faggots ruin his poetry for me.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 8:57

>>42
Wow so you really are 12 and retarded. Ginsberg was a scarf-wearing hipster faggot, he was a posturing asshole who actually didn't say or do anything of substance. Granted, poetry is subjectively liked, but I am almost certain Ginsberg is your favorite poet because you've read very little poetry. Not trying to be elitist, it's just that Ginsberg sucks.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 9:11

>>43

I've gone through Poe, Yeats, Frost, Dickinson, Basho, Paterson, Byron, William Wordsworth and some others.

I've only just got into Ginsberg, so he is my favourite of the moment. I am enjoying reading through his poetry.

I don't see what's wrong with that. Perhaps it is just a phase, but I am drawn to his poetry at the moment.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 9:45

>>44
Poe, Yeats, Frost, Dickinson, Basho, Paterson, Byron, William Wordsworth and some others.
LOL. Some others? I'm willing to bet not many. Face it, the poets you listed are all meh at best, they are only well known due to sleazy showmanship tactics.
I don't see what's wrong with that. Perhaps it is just a phase, but I am drawn to his poetry at the moment.
Yes, being twelve is a phase. What is wrong with is you are posting on this board while being twelve, wait ten years and then come back here to post about poetry.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 10:03

Donne, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Yeats, Eliot, Auden, Gibran, Neruda

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 10:13

>>45
Wordsworth and Yeats were sleazy showmen? Have you even read them?

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 13:37

Ginsberg and Baudelaire are my leftovers from high school and college respectively.
Still my favourites, though.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 20:07

>>45

I am twenty-two. You know, for a board full of "literate intellectuals", /book/ can be rather childish sometimes. "You don't share my opinion, so you must be twelve years old" is the kind of non sequitur logic I expect to see on /b/.

By "some others", I meant poets I have only touch upon (read a couple of their poems at best). The ones I listed are poets I have read significant portions of. I like Keats, Baudelaire and Blake from what I have read. But I will admit it is not very much.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-24 22:45

>>49
Why is it that people always feel obliged to post their age when someone on the internet accuses them of being a child? I'll never understand

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-25 0:44

>>50

I was merely drawing my accuser back to reality. A reality where it most certainly has been ten years since I was twelve years of age.

And a reality where it will take more than "they suck" to drive home an opinion about some rather well-liked poets.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-26 12:24

Byron

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-26 17:10

Byron was the worst of the Romantics. Well, maybe Coleridge.

Don't change these.
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