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  • June 3, 2025 Poetry Prof

    Song: Love Armed

    Love really hurts in Aphra Behn’s cherubic rework

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  • May 11, 2025 Poetry Prof

    The Capital

    W.H. Auden takes us on a tour of a glittering city… and gives us a glimpse of the rot that lies beneath

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  • May 2, 2025 Poetry Prof

    The Road

    Nancy Cato races time itself – and almost wins – in this exhilarating ballad from Australia

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  • April 28, 2025 Poetry Prof

    an afternoon nap

    Arthur Yap is woken from his daily snooze by a piano lesson gone awry

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  • February 13, 2025 Poetry Prof

    At the Bus Station

    Life is fast-paced, frenetic, and chaotic in Julius Chingono’s disturbing poem.

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  • February 8, 2025 Poetry Prof

    Touch and Go

    Stevie Smith wonders whether mankind is truly alone in the world

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  • September 10, 2024 Poetry Prof

    Plaits

    Elizabeth Smither weaves a life lesson from strands of her own hair

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  • August 10, 2024 Poetry Prof

    A Long Journey

    Follow Musaemura Zimunya back up an endless river into Zimbabwe’s forgotten past

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  • July 31, 2024 Poetry Prof

    The Enemies

    Elizabeth Jennings explores the poisonous power of paranoia in this cold-war parable

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  • August 10, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The Instant of My Death

    Sarah Jackson makes an unexpected connection in this elusive poem about travel and change.

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  • July 24, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Song

    George Szirtes pays tribute to a determined and courageous spirit.

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  • June 28, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Rich and Poor or, Saint and Sinner

    Thomas Love Peacock exposes the unfairness of religious moralism towards the poor.

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  • June 12, 2023 Poetry Prof

    These are the Times We Live In

    Imtiaz Dharker’s poem exposes institutional xenophobia through a demeaning interaction.

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  • June 2, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Boxes

    Life’s a squeeze in Sampurna Chattarji’s depiction of Mumbai.

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  • May 27, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Children of Wealth

    Elizabeth Daryush shows how money can’t buy happiness in this sympathetic sonnet.

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  • May 23, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The Bus

    Get your tickets and board Arun Kolatkar’s mysterious old bus for a mystical nighttime journey.

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  • May 15, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Funeral Blues

    When the world doesn’t seem to care, turn to Auden’s moving elegy.

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  • May 8, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Away, Melancholy

    When Stevie Smith gets knocked down, she gets back up again.

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  • May 4, 2023 Poetry Prof

    From Long Distance

    Tony Harrison’s father copes with grief in his own way.

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  • April 29, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The City Planners

    Take a drive through Margaret Atwood’s sinister suburban poem to find out who the City Planners are – and what they really want.

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  • April 21, 2023 Poetry Prof

    A Consumer’s Report

    Peter Porter pushes back against consumer-culture in this uniquely un-poetic poem.

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  • April 18, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Night Sweat

    Sink or swim in the sea of Robert Lowell’s obsession.

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  • April 14, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Request to a Year

    Judith Wright knows what it takes to be a successful artist: her great-great-grandmother showed her the way.

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  • April 10, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The Telephone Call

    Fleur Adcock reminds us that, in the final reckoning, we’re all winners; we just need to remember to appreciate it.

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  • April 8, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Ozymandias

    Pride comes before a fall in Percy Shelley’s smashing sonnet.

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  • April 5, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The Man with Night Sweats

    Thom Gunn gives form to fear in a time of crisis.

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  • March 26, 2023 Poetry Prof

    He Never Expected Much

    Don’t look back in anger, advises Thomas Hardy; but is he hiding deeper regrets?

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  • March 16, 2023 Poetry Prof

    The Spirit is too Blunt an Instrument

    Anne Stevenson’s philosophical poem asks what it means to be truly alive.

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  • March 4, 2023 Poetry Prof

    On Finding a Small Fly Crushed in a Book

    Charles Tennyson Turner finds himself unexpectedly moved by a tiny tragedy.

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  • February 23, 2023 Poetry Prof

    Rain

    Edward Thomas’ not-quite-a-war poem inspired by a tempestuous downpour.

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  • April 10, 2022 Poetry Prof

    The Character of a Happy Life

    Follow Henry Wotton’s step-by-step guide to peace and contentment.

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  • April 6, 2022 Poetry Prof

    Rhyme of the Dead Self

    See the lengths A.R.D. Fairburn will go to bury the misery of romantic failure.

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  • February 10, 2022 Poetry Prof

    Nearing Forty

    A sleepless night prompts Derek Walcott’s intense, introspective poem.

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  • January 12, 2022 Poetry Prof

    Verses Written on her Death-Bed at Bath

    Mary Monck ruminates on death and life in this touching verse-letter.

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  • January 5, 2022 Poetry Prof

    Now Let No Charitable Hope

    Elinor Wylie teaches us to face adversity with a dignified smile.

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  • October 5, 2021 Poetry Prof

    The Planners

    Boey Kim Cheng reveals the sinister side of relentless urbanisation in his poem that delivers a timely warning.

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  • June 24, 2021 Poetry Prof

    from An Essay on Criticism

    Join Alexander Pope on a metaphysical journey of discovery… that will last a lifetime.

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  • May 13, 2021 Poetry Prof

    The Forsaken Wife

    Elizabeth Thomas exposes what it means to be a woman in a man’s world.

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  • February 15, 2021 Poetry Prof

    Love in a Life

    Lose yourself in Robert Browning’s twisted labyrinth.

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  • January 23, 2021 Poetry Prof

    I Find No Peace

    Sir Thomas Wyatt is trapped by his own conflicting desires.

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  • September 17, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Waterfall

    Immerse yourself in Lauris Edmond’s beautiful images of sun and spray.

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  • August 9, 2020 Poetry Prof

    A Leave-Taking

    Charles Swinburne says he’ll do anything for love – but does he mean it?

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  • July 25, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Stanzas Written in Dejection, near Naples

    Percy Bysshe Shelley wrestles with depression in a poem that seems to anticipate his own destiny.

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  • July 1, 2020 Poetry Prof

    The Flower-Fed Buffaloes

    Vachel Lindsay laments a vanished way of life.

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  • May 23, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Rooms

    What should be her sanctuary becomes Charlotte Mew’s prison cell.

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  • May 6, 2020 Poetry Prof

    I Hear An Army…

    James Joyce suffers from terrible nightmares.

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  • April 21, 2020 Poetry Prof

    The Voice

    Thomas Hardy’s poem is touching – but also troubling when he rewrites the past.

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  • April 7, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Dover Beach

    Armies of ignorance conquer all in Matthew Arnold’s dark and disturbing vision of the world.

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  • March 18, 2020 Poetry Prof

    After

    There’s never enough time says Philip Bourke Marston in this powerful poem about loss and bereavement.

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  • March 5, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Amends

    Adrienne Rich’s mysterious poem suggests we all have something to make up for – but what?

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  • February 28, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Sonnet 29

    Whatever you do, don’t pity Edna St Vincent Millay for her broken heart.

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  • February 20, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Song to the Men of England

    Percy Bysshe Shelley exhorts us to rise up in this powerful poetical polemic.

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  • February 9, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Not Waving But Drowning

    Stevie Smith asks if we couldn’t all do a little more to help from time to time.

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  • January 31, 2020 Poetry Prof

    In Praise of Creation

    Faith is stronger than doubt in this eulogy by Elizabeth Jennings.

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  • January 26, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Ode on Melancholy

    Go with John Keats on a quest to find Joy in the mystical realm of Lethe.

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  • January 17, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Cetacean

    If you feel like you’re missing that spark of inspiration, go whale-watching with Peter Reading.

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  • January 7, 2020 Poetry Prof

    Little Boy Crying

    Mervyn Morris debates if it’s ever right to smack a child.

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  • December 29, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Coming

    Is Philip Larkin dreading or welcoming the arrival of spring?

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  • December 26, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Mid-Term Break

    Seamus Heaney shares with us a sad memory from his childhood.

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  • December 19, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Stormcock in Elder

    Muse, angel, herald, companion, spirit guide. Ruth Pitter explores the significance of a seemingly ordinary bird in this lovely poem.

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  • December 15, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Caged Bird

    Maya Angelou explores suffering, inequality and a people’s refusal to give up in this hard-hitting poem.

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  • November 18, 2019 Poetry Prof

    The Three Fates

    Rosemary Dobson’s unique backwards-poem reminds us that, however much we might want to, we can’t change the past.

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  • November 6, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Written Near a Port on a Dark Evening

    Charlotte Smith negotiates the shifting sands of life in this dark and stormy sonnet.

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  • October 25, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Marrysong

    If you think that getting married means living happily-ever-after, Dennis Scott will probably want to have a word.

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  • October 20, 2019 Poetry Prof

    The Caged Skylark

    Gerard Manley Hopkins explores what it feels like to be trapped in your skin.

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  • October 7, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Rising Five

    Norman Nicholson warns us not to wish our lives away.

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  • September 25, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Watching For Dolphins

    David Constantine wonders if there isn’t something more to life than meets the eye.

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  • September 15, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Carpet Weavers, Morocco

    Looking at life differently in Carol Rumens’ challenging poem

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  • September 9, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Muliebrity

    After many years away from the country of her birth, Sujata Bhatt wonders if it’s finally time to share her memories of India.

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  • September 7, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Storyteller

    Liz Lochhead casts a spell in this magical realist poem.

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  • September 1, 2019 Poetry Prof

    The Poplar-Field

    William Cowper visits a woody riverbank by which he passed many pleasant childhood days… to find it irrevocably changed.

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  • August 30, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Plenty

    Isobel Dixon shows us that older really does mean wiser as she reminisces ruefully about her childhood.

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  • August 18, 2019 Poetry Prof

    You Will Know When You Get There

    Allen Curnow suggests that there’s a right time to die in this tough, but rewarding, poem.

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  • August 8, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Farmhand

    Watch as James K. Baxter’s eponymous Farmhand refuses the call to adventure in this poem from New Zealand.

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  • August 3, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Sonnet 43

    Elizabeth Barrett Browning attempts the impossible: counting the ways one person can love another.

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  • July 22, 2019 Poetry Prof

    She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways

    Who is the mysterious Lucy in this simple elegy by William Wordsworth?

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  • July 11, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Monologue

    Why Hone Tuwhare likes working near a door.

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  • July 7, 2019 Poetry Prof

    The Kraken

    Alfred Lord Tennyson conjures a spectacular and sympathetic vision of a mythical creature.

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  • June 22, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Afternoon with Irish Cows

    Unlock your imagination and help Billy Collins find his vanished herd.

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  • June 17, 2019 Poetry Prof

    Those Winter Sundays

    Robert Hayden’s heartbreaking song of ice and fire.

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July 24, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

Song

George Szirtes pays tribute to a determined and courageous spirit.

Read
June 28, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

Rich and Poor or, Saint and Sinner

Thomas Love Peacock exposes the unfairness of religious moralism towards the poor.

Read
June 12, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

These are the Times We Live In

Imtiaz Dharker’s poem exposes institutional xenophobia through a demeaning interaction.

Read
June 2, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

Boxes

Life’s a squeeze in Sampurna Chattarji’s depiction of Mumbai.

Read
May 27, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

Children of Wealth

Elizabeth Daryush shows how money can’t buy happiness in this sympathetic sonnet.

Read
May 23, 2023 From Volume 2, Part 3 (2025 - 2027) / IGCSE Literature

The Bus

Get your tickets and board Arun Kolatkar’s mysterious old bus for a mystical nighttime journey.

Read
May 15, 2023 From Volume 1, Part 4 (2023 - 2025) / IGCSE Literature

Funeral Blues

When the world doesn’t seem to care, turn to Auden’s moving elegy.

Read
May 8, 2023 From Volume 1, Part 4 (2023 - 2025) / IGCSE Literature

Away, Melancholy

When Stevie Smith gets knocked down, she gets back up again.

Read
May 4, 2023 From Volume 1, Part 4 (2023 - 2025) / IGCSE Literature

From Long Distance

Tony Harrison’s father copes with grief in his own way.

Read
April 29, 2023 From Volume 1, Part 4 (2023 - 2025) / IGCSE Literature

The City Planners

Take a drive through Margaret Atwood’s sinister suburban poem to find out who the City Planners are – and what they really want.

Read

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Recent Posts

  • Song: Love Armed
  • The Capital
  • The Road
  • an afternoon nap
  • At the Bus Station

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