Showing posts with label Sylvia Plath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sylvia Plath. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Celebrating American Poetry


I have always been fascinated by America. I've been privileged to travel many times, and even on occasion, work in America over my years as an academic. One big connection I have is that my home city of Plymouth is the location for the Mayflower Steps - from where the 'Pilgrims' set sail in 1620. The time I spent in California, Nevada, South Dakota and Minnesota, as well as travels along the Eastern seaboard, always remind me that we are one people separated by a common language! I'm a great fan of American poetry, so it's high time I wrote something to celebrate this particular genre of poetry. 

Here is a brief history of some of the most prominent American poets, each one hyperlinked to a biography and other relevant information (I encourage you to click on these links because they are incredibly informative!)

The earliest American poetry emerged during the colonial period of the seventeenth century. Much of it was influenced by those Pilgrims I previously mentioned - the Puritan settlers of New England, whose poetry focused on faith, morality and spiritual life. One of the first published American poets was Anne Bradstreet, whose collection The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America (1650) was a personal reflection on her faith and family. Another important colonial poet, Edward Taylor, wrote deeply spiritual poetry that remained largely unpublished until the twentieth century but is now recognised as one of the finest examples of early American devotional poetry.

Following the American Revolution, poetry increasingly reflected the ideals of independence and national identity. Writers sought to distinguish American literature from its British roots by celebrating democracy, liberty and the nation's landscapes. Philip Freneau, often dubbed the 'Poet of the American Revolution,' wrote patriotic and political poems while also exploring nature and Native American life. His work helped establish a distinct American literary voice during the nation's early years.

The nineteenth century marked the emergence of some of America's greatest poets. The romantic poet William Cullen Bryant was famous for his meditations on nature and mortality, while Henry Wadsworth Longfellow gained international fame through narrative poems such as The Song of Hiawatha and Paul Revere's Ride. Longfellow's accessible style widened the appeal of poetry and helped establish American literature abroad.

Two of the most influential poets of the nineteenth century were Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, whose innovations transformed American poetry. Whitman's Leaves of Grass rejected traditional poetic forms in favour of free verse, celebrating democracy, individuality and the diversity of American life. His expansive style and optimistic vision influenced generations of poets around the world. In contrast, Dickinson wrote short, intensely personal poems that explored death, faith, nature and the inner self. Although most of her work was published posthumously, she is now regarded as one of America's greatest lyrical poets. Another influential poet and writer of the time was Edgar Allen Poe, who introduced the world to poetry that could be mysterious with a hint of the macabre. 

The twentieth century was characterised by an extraordinary diversity in American poetry. Modernist poets such as T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, and Marianne Moore experimented with language, symbolism, and fragmented forms to reflect the complexities of modern life. Edward E. Cummings took such creative deviance to another level with his experimentation in the fracturing of form, structure and meaning.  

The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s introduced powerful African American voices, including Langston Hughes and Claude McKay, whose poetry celebrated Black culture while confronting racism and inequality. 

Following the Second World War, American poetry continued to diversify. Robert Frost gained widespread acclaim for poems rooted in rural New England that explored universal human experiences. Allen Ginsberg, a leading figure of the Beat Poets (see my earlier post for a fuller explanation of this movement), challenged conventional society through bold, experimental works such as Howl.  The raw, honest and dry realist poetry of Charles Bukowski influenced generations of free form poets. 

Other influential poets, including Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, and Robert Lowell, pioneered confessional poetry by examining mental health, family relationships and personal identity with brutal honesty. In the 70s Gil Scott Heron incorporated the spoken word and extemporised music into his politically aware street poetry. Carl Sandberg wrote vibrant celebrations of American industrialism, championing the working class through accessible, free-verse language.

The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries have seen American poetry become increasingly inclusive. Poets such as Maya AngelouLouise Glück and Rita Dove all addressed issues such as race, gender, history, indigenous identity and social justice. Their work reflects the multicultural nature of contemporary America and demonstrates the continuing ability of poetry to inspire dialogue and social change. In 2021 The Hill We Climb by Amanda Gorman introduced a new generation to the power of poetry in public life when she performed it at the presidential inauguration of Joe Biden

We have seen that the history of American poetry is one of constant innovation and diversity. From the devotional verse of Bradstreet to the democratic vision of Whitman; the introspection of Dickinson, the modernism of Eliot; the experimentation of Cummings and Pound; to the contemporary voices of Angelou and Gorman, American poets have continually redefined what poetry is able to achieve. Their work reflects the nation's history while exploring universal questions of identity, freedom, and human experience, form and meaning, which ensures that American poetry remains one of the world's most dynamic literary traditions. 

Steve Wheeler

Image copyright 2026 by Steve Wheeler

Monday, 24 July 2023

Aspiring to inspire!



Inspiration! 

What is it? What drives us to aspire to new tasks, to envelope the degrees of difficulty and overcome the highest heights? To master the navigations of damage control, and be the best at what we can do with what we have? What is inspiration?


Upon playing with my nieces that live so far away at a family reunion this weekend… I saw generations of loved ones past sparkling in their youthful eyes. It was both so endearingly sweet and sad at the same time… yet encouraging to me. The progress of our families in the existence of our times…


                                           


Poetry can be inspiring. It draws me into its complicated webs weaved by so many poets of different cultures, places, perspectives, and most of all, dreams. This diversity feeds the poet soul, which is both curious and insatiable for information about the human condition.


Inspiring poems take readers in new directions they may have never considered when they hit the target of the heart. They aim to motivate us, direct us, and push us into becoming someone or something better than what we are. Directly, or in metaphor, these poems are the ones we like to quote or keep as a reminder when things go rough…


                                           


Consider this invitation from “Invictus”, by William Ernest Henley, to remain strong and honorable even in the face of death…:

It matters not how strait the gate

How charged with punishments the scroll

I am the master of my fate

I am the captain of my soul

The two last lines echo the sentiment of positive construction, expression, and direction needed to keep one’s head up and stay on the ball no matter what. We go on!


                                           


What about good old Walt? Not Walt Disney! Walt Whitman… his Song Of Myself continues to bring smiles even to this day to many an English and Literature class with the early morning rays of educational sunshine beaming through those sweet windows…

I celebrate myself, and sing myself, 
  And what I assume you shall assume, 
For every atom belonging to me as

  good belongs to you.

An originality and individual value is within us all, not only to be recognized, but validated and cherished as beautiful as well. Song of Myself says this in so many ways…

    

                                           


Take the breath of Rudyard Kipling in his monumental inspiration entitled “If”:

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with kings—nor lose the common touch;
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you;
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run—
   

Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And—which is more—you’ll be a Man, my son!

This applies not only to “man” but women, children, and all human souls! I live by this fiercely bold and courageous philosophy…. “Yours is the Earth and all upon it, if you can “fill the unforgiving minute”… seize the opportunities laid before you! Take control of your destiny! Shades of Invictus… this is a prevailing theme in inspiring poems.


                                           


Women have an equal (if not more) of a voice in poetry today than has ever been heard in the history of our prestigious craft. Women such as Rupi Kaur, Maya Angelou, Carol Ann Duffy, Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson… transcend emotion into inspirational action… 


Take Wheelsong poet Imelda Zapata Garcia, who continues to encourage a strength and determination that is so original, creative, practical, fierce, and beautiful all at once. This is such an awe inspiring exposition…  “The Gambit”:

Each wrung she stepped upon
led to a faltering height
try as she might, to climb
slipped to the base of the flight
the steps which rose up
from the floor 
led straight to another
in store
Beams of illusion it seems
crept in from high up above 
with promise of hope in a dream
naught much else when
push comes to shove 
What shone at the top of the stairs
a blinding white light on the morn
was merely a glimmer of hope
which climbing that crucible 
had worn 

The promise and glimmer of hope sprinkled within this poem exhibit an unbridled exuberance to overcome the most difficult obstacles, to challenge “the gambit” of life, and come out ahead. It reflects dark and light in such a way as to cover the reader in honest shades of brilliant reality… leaving them forearmed to face the day. Such an amazing inspiration! It’s reassuring to know poets such as Imelda are out there interpreting reality for us!!!


                                          


This is a blog for writers by writers. So I have to ask… What do you find inspiring? Does it aid in your writing? How so? Please feel free to comment below! I love hearing from you! 


Thank you for reading, and until next time… write on!! And inspire!


Matt Elmore


English performance poetry

Those who know me will know my history in performance poetry. This emerged largely from my stage presence as a musician and front-man for se...