![]() ![]() Or Citizen Kane? (See also: “ The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”) I mean, have you seen Interstellar? (Or Dangerous Minds or Independence Day?) A continent standing in for losses larger than itself.”ĭylan Thomas, “ Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night” Even of self-mockery, in the poetically pushed rhyme word “vaster,” and the ladylike, pinkies-up “shan’t.” An exceedingly rare mention of her mother-as a woman who once owned a watch. This blew my mind in high school, and I wasn’t the only one.īishop’s much loved and much discussed ode to loss, which Claudia Roth Pierpont called “a triumph of control, understatement, wit. Otherwise known as “ the most misread poem in America.” See also: “ Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.” And “ Birches.” All begin in delight and end in wisdom, as Frost taught us great poems should. “It has never failed to be equal to both the fracture of its own era and what, alas, turned out to be the even greater fracture of the ongoing 20th century and now, it seems, the 21st century.” See also: “ The Love Song of J. “It has never lost its glamour,” Paul Muldoon observed. ![]() Without a doubt one of the most important poems of the 20th century. The most anthologized poem of the last 25 years for a reason. See also: “ This is Just to Say,” which, among other things, has spawned a host of memes and parodies. William Carlos Williams, “ The Red Wheelbarrow” But for now, happy reading (and re-reading): Finally, despite the headline, I’m sure there are many, many iconic poems out there that I’ve missed-so feel free to extend this list in the comments. I also excluded book-length poems, because they’re really a different form. NB that I limited myself to one poem per poet-which means that the impetus for this list actually gets bumped for the widely quoted (and misunderstood) “The Road Not Taken,” but so it goes. (What makes a poem iconic? For our purposes here, it’s primarily a matter of cultural ubiquity, though unimpeachable excellence helps any case.) So for those of you who were not present for our epic office argument, I have listed some of them here. Turns out, despite frequent (false) claims that poetry is dead and/or irrelevant and/or boring, there are plenty of poems that have sunk deep into our collective consciousness as cultural icons. ![]() Today is the anniversary of the publication of Robert Frost’s iconic poem “ Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” a fact that spurred the Literary Hub office into a long conversation about their favorite poems, the most iconic poems written in English, and which poems we should all have already read (or at least be reading next). ![]()
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