![]() Second, by many devices of closely linking sonnets for long arguments Symonds demonstrates the strength of the sonnet as strophe without entirely destroying its single entity. In "Animi Figura", the biography of a mind, he avoids some of the monotony inherent in this meditative tradition by arranging sonnets in groups varying in length from two to twenty-two and by using titles for each grouping as well as for occasional single sonnets. To this genre Symonds makes at least three contributions. His favorite medium was some 340 sonnets, most of which were arranged in sequences. Of those polled, 17% said a good poem can be evocative and memorable and 16% felt children should be made to memorise famous poems at school, although 21% confessed to not reading a single poem since they were a child.Īn imaginative 12% said their favourite poem can transport them away to somewhere completely different - and 17% admitted that their favourite poems rhymed.Although John Addington Symonds is at present best known as historian, critic, and voluminous letter writer, he wished to be known as a poet. The study also found that one in 10 adults claim they can confidently recite famous poems and a romantic 8% have written poetry for a lover. “Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 is a worthy winner, touching on the themes of unattainable love and mortality, and capturing the imagination of generation upon generation of readers.” More modern poems also featured in the top 25 however, such as Warsan Shire’s, For Women Who Are Difficult to Love (2015), Cat D by George the Poet (2015), The Point by Kae Tempest (2014) and Cocoon by Holly Poetry (2015).Īccording to the poll of 2,000 adults, 18% of us love the sound of poetry being read aloud and 8% often put pen to paper and write their own material.Īnd although many long-standing poems topped the list, 15% of those polled think rap is modern poetry with as much merit as traditional verses.Ī spokesman for Perspectus Global said: “Poetry can evoke strong emotions and this reveals the poems that are most loved - many which have endured for centuries. How Do I Love Thee written by Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 1890, Lord Byron’s 1814 short poem She Walks in Beauty, and Ode to a Nightingale by John Keats written in 1819 also made the list. ![]() The study, by insight agency Perspectus Global, found that Lewis Carrol’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky - which was included in his 1871 novel Through the Looking-Glass, the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - came fifth in the top 25 poems with 8%. The latter is a literary example of Victorian-era stoicism and is written in the form of paternal advice to the poet’s son. The Raven, a narrative poem written by American writer Edgar Allen Poe in 1845, came in joint third place with 9% of the vote, sharing the accolade with If by Nobel laureate Rudyard Kipling (9%) written circa 1895 (with also 9% of the vote). The poem was inspired by an event on 15th April 1802 when Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy came across a long belt of daffodils while wandering in a forest. The nationwide poll, commissioned to mark National Poetry Day on 7th Oct, revealed that the second most loved poem (with 10% of the vote) was Daffodils by William Wordsworth, also commonly referred to as ‘I wandered lonely as a cloud’. Photo by Taylor Wright on UnsplashWritten in 1609 and undoubtedly the best known of the 154 sonnets written by English playwright William Shakespeare, Sonnet 18 has emerged as the nation’s favourite poem, coming top with 18% of the vote.ĭespite popular belief, Sonnet 18 does not appear in Romeo and Juliet, and in fact Shakespeare wrote this poem as part of his Fair Youth sequence of sonnets, which historians actually believe were about a young man.
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