Whatever meaning the poet intends for it. In fact, the word can have alternate connotations or even alternate meanings within the same poem if the poet is adventurous.
eg.
It was icey cold
yet the hot sweat rolled
down my cheeks and I don't know why
And the greasey smoke
in an icey cloak
went streaking down the sky.
eg.
And in the crystals myrid facets a fiery flame did dance
in bluish cold with a ardor bold it vigour did dance and dance.
Perhaps you mean "Restoration poetry"...
Prancing Poetry is poetry that has high spots an low spots. That makes you want to cry and laugh. Up an down. Hot and cold. Yes and no.
Audrey B. Baird has written: 'Storm coming!' -- subject(s): American poetry, Children's poetry, American, Juvenile poetry, Poetry, Rain and rainfall, Storms 'A cold snap!' -- subject(s): Autumn, Children's poetry, American, Juvenile poetry, Weather
Three....
Invoke poetry means, appeal to, call on, summon or request to poetry, deeming poetry as an authority or deity. It generally means look for or search for what poetry has to say on a particular subject or matter.
poetry
ποίηση
You can dedicate a poem to any god, or to God. If you mean 'Who was the god of poetry?' that was Apollo.
poetry is good.
pee and poo
the speakers/narrators attitude to his subject matter or audience; the distinctive mood created by this
Jack Prelutsky has written: 'It's snowing! it's snowing!' -- subject(s): Children's poetry, American, Winter, Poetry, Juvenile poetry, Snow 'The mean old mean hyena' -- subject(s): Stories in rhyme, Hyenas, Juvenile fiction, Fiction 'Stardines swim high across the sky and other poems' -- subject(s): Imaginary creatures, Juvenile poetry, Children's poetry, American 'It's Thanksgiving' -- subject(s): Thanksgiving Day, Poetry, Juvenile poetry, Children's poetry, American