Yes, they can be heard as well as read.
play write , poems
Tradegies History Comedies poems
Sonnet LXXIII deals with decay as one ages, and how love is greater when it loves that close to death.
As Hamlet says, "words, words, words".
Most of them didn't but Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece and The Phoenix and the Turtle did have names. A lot of his poems are given names by editors but they didn't come that way. Also a lot of speeches from the plays are passed off as "poems" and given names by anthologists.
He wrote poems to express his love and affection for someone
Romeo.
He was born in 1564 and died in 1616
love labours one
The best thing to do would be to steal the diary of a 14 yr old girl - it should be full of sticky-sweet love poems. If your school has a literary magazine that would be a good place to check. Also, the internet is full of poems by teenagers who think they can write. Just type "poetry" in Google and follow the first link. I could be misunderstanding your question though. If you really meant "How can one hear teenage poems and survive the experience?", the best solution is to cover your ears. If you were asking where to find good poems by teenagers, then you're out of luck - poetry as an art is dead.
Nobody kept track of which of Shakespeare's poems he wrote when. Some of his sonnets may have been written before Venus and Adonis in 1593, but we don't know whether or which.
Ben Johnson.