he pursed the nothing career
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was an American poet and educator known for his lyrical poetry. He enjoyed writing, particularly poetry that reflected on themes of love, history, and nature. Longfellow also had a strong interest in languages and culture, which influenced his writing style and content.
Longfellow, Dickinson, and Whitman all used vivid imagery and language to evoke emotion and convey deeper meanings in their poetry. Additionally, they were known for their unique styles and innovative approaches to form and structure in their poems.
It is supposed to be about a man wooing a woman with the poetry of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow... and then wooing her with this own Longfellow!
Judith Viorst started her writing career in the 1960s. She is known for her children's books, essays, and poetry.
Longfellow points out that a dead poet who is still read - is effectively alive (because people still read his poems); but a living poet no-one reads, might as well be dead (nobody notices him). Longfellow then wonders if poetry is worthwhile. The poem concludes by deciding that poetry is worthwhile: because the important thing about poetry is to write it, it doesn't finally matter whether anybody reads it or not (the poet already had the benefit of writing the stuff). The notion that the point of poetry is the fun of writing it (who cares whether it is fit to be read or not?) is shared by all truly atrocious poets.
We have no direct evidence as to what Shakespeare did or did not like. We can assume that he liked writing poetry because he chose a career as a writer. If he didn't want to write, he didn't have to. He had his acting career to fall back on.
In Longfellow's poetry, Hiawatha is married to a Dakota named Minnehaha.
he wrote poetry, with " Daffodills' the most famous one.
Yes, his father didn't approve of him writing..especially writing poetry.
Shel started writing poetry as a young boy
Nature was a common subject of romantic poetry. Longfellow wrote about historical events.
by staring at ordinary objects by being with people by being alone by reading prose by reading poetry by taking a walk by thinking you're in love by flipping whimsically through a dictionary by writing awful poetry by writing awful poetry by writing awful poetry