Poets L-Z Encyclopedia Articles By Title
August Wilhelm von Schlegel was a German scholar and critic, one of the most influential disseminators of the ideas......
Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart was a German poet of the Sturm und Drang period, known for his pietistic and......
James Schuyler was an American poet, playwright, and novelist, often associated with the New York school of poets,......
Delmore Schwartz was an American poet, short-story writer, and literary critic noted for his lyrical descriptions......
Leonardo Sciascia was an Italian writer noted for his metaphysical examinations of political corruption and arbitrary......
Manuel Scorza was a Peruvian novelist, poet, and political activist who interwove mythic and fantastic elements......
Alexander Scott was a Scottish lyricist who is regarded as one of the last of the makaris (or poets) of the 16th......
Cyril Meir Scott was an English composer and poet known especially for his piano and orchestral music. In the early......
Duncan Campbell Scott was a Canadian administrator, poet, and short-story writer, best known at the end of the......
Francis Reginald Scott was a member of the Montreal group of poets in the 1920s and an influential promoter of......
Sir Walter Scott was a Scottish novelist, poet, historian, and biographer who is often considered both the inventor......
Maurice Scève was a French poet who was considered great in his own day, then long neglected. Reinstated by 20th-century......
W.G. Sebald was a German-English novelist, essayist, poet, and scholar who was known for his haunting, nonchronologically......
Sir Charles Sedley, 4th Baronet was an English Restoration poet, dramatist, wit, and courtier. Sedley attended......
Sedulius Scottus was a poet and scholar who was part of a group of Irish savants at Liège. His poems, mostly in......
Eugène Seers was a French Canadian poet and critic who is regarded as the first major literary critic of Quebec.......
George Seferis was a Greek poet, essayist, and diplomat who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1963. After studying......
Sei Shōnagon was a diarist, poet, and courtier whose witty, learned Pillow Book (Makura no sōshi) exhibits a brilliant......
Jaroslav Seifert was a poet and journalist who in 1984 became the first Czech to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.......
Robert Sempill was a Scottish poet who first used the metre that became the standard form for the Scottish humorous......
Sir James Sempill was a Scottish poet remembered for his satirical poem A picktooth for the Pope, or the packman’s......
Léopold Senghor was a poet, teacher, and statesman, the first president of Senegal, and a major proponent of the......
Vittorio Sereni was an Italian poet, author, editor, and translator who was known for his lyric verse and for his......
Robert W. Service was a popular verse writer called “the Canadian Kipling” for his rollicking ballads of the “frozen......
Vikram Seth is an Indian poet, novelist, and travel writer known for his verse novel The Golden Gate (1986) and......
Anna Seward was an English poet, literary critic, and intellectual who attained fame and critical acclaim on both......
Anne Sexton was an American poet whose work is noted for its confessional intensity. Anne Harvey attended Garland......
Thomas Shadwell was an English dramatist and poet laureate, known for his broad comedies of manners and as the......
William Shakespeare was a poet, dramatist, and actor often called the English national poet. He is considered by......
- Introduction
- Playwright, Poet, Actor
- Sexuality, Poetry, Plays
- Poet, Playwright, Stratford
- Poet, Playwright, Bard
- Theater, Poetry, Plays
- Plays, Poems, Sonnets
- Poet, Playwright, Stratford
- Poetry, Sonnets, Plays
- Romeo, Juliet, Playwright
- Playwright, Poet, Julius Caesar
- Romances, Poetry, Plays
- Sources, Plays, Poems
- Poet, Playwright, Dramatist
- Poetry, Plays, Sonnets
- Feminist Criticism, Gender Studies
- Plays, Poems, Sonnets
Varlam Shalamov was a Russian writer best known for a series of short stories about imprisonment in Soviet labour......
Ntozake Shange was an American author of plays, poetry, and fiction noted for their feminist themes and racial......
Karl Shapiro was an American poet and critic whose verse ranges from passionately physical love lyrics to sharp......
Aḥmad Shawqī was known as the amīr al-shuʿarāʾ (“prince of poets”) of modern Arabic poetry and a pioneer of Arabic......
Percy Bysshe Shelley was an English Romantic poet whose passionate search for personal love and social justice......
William Shenstone was a representative 18th-century English “man of taste.” As a poet, amateur landscape gardener,......
Archie Shepp is an American tenor saxophonist, composer, dramatist, teacher, and pioneer of the free jazz movement,......
Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko was the foremost Ukrainian poet of the 19th century and a major figure of the Ukrainian......
Carol Shields was an American-born Canadian author whose work explores the lives of ordinary people. Her masterpiece,......
Robert Shiels was a Scottish poet and editor. Moving to London, where he was a printer, Shiels was employed by......
Bagrat Shinkuba was an Abkhazian writer and political figure, best known for his poetry. Shinkuba was trained as......
James Shirley was an English poet and dramatist, one of the leading playwrights in the decade before the closing......
Abraham Shlonsky was an Israeli poet who founded Israel’s Symbolist school and was an innovator in using colloquial......
Paul Shorey was a U.S. scholar and Humanist noted for his writings on classical Greek art and thought. Shorey graduated......
Shōhaku was a Japanese scholar and author of waka and renga (“linked-verse”) poetry during the late Muromachi period......
Shōtetsu was a priest-poet who is considered the last truly important tanka poet before the 20th century. Shōtetsu......
Sir Philip Sidney was an Elizabethan courtier, statesman, soldier, poet, and patron of scholars and poets, considered......
L.H. Sigourney was a popular writer, known as “the sweet singer of Hartford,” who was one of the first American......
Angelos Sikelianós was one of the leading 20th-century Greek lyrical poets. Sikelianós’ first important work, the......
Angelus Silesius was a religious poet remembered primarily as the author of Der cherubinischer Wandersmann (1674;......
Silius Italicus was a Latin epic poet whose 17-book, 12,000-line Punica on the Second Punic War (218–201 bc) is......
Leslie Marmon Silko is an American poet and novelist whose work often centers on the dissonance between Native......
José Asunción Silva was a Colombian poet whose metrical experimentation and romantic reminiscences introduced a......
Shel Silverstein was an American cartoonist, children’s author, poet, songwriter, and playwright best known for......
Sima Xiangru was a Chinese poet renowned for his fu, a form of descriptive poetry. Self-trained in literature and......
Charles Simic was a Yugoslavian-born American poet who evoked his eastern European heritage and his childhood experiences......
William Gilmore Simms was an outstanding Southern novelist. Motherless at two, Simms was reared by his grandmother......
Simonides of Ceos was a Greek poet, noted for his lyric poetry, elegiacs, and epigrams; he was an uncle of the......
Louis Simpson was a Jamaican-born American poet and critic, notable for his marked development in poetic style.......
May Sinclair was an English writer and suffragist known for her innovations in the development of the psychological......
Sir Keith Sinclair was a poet, historian, and educator noted for his histories of New Zealand. Sinclair’s education......
Sitwell family, British family of writers. Edith Sitwell (1887–1964) attracted attention when she joined her brothers......
Edith Sitwell was an English poet who first gained fame for her stylistic artifices but who emerged during World......
Sir Osbert Sitwell, 5th Baronet was an English man of letters who became famous, with his sister Edith and brother......
Sir Sacheverell Sitwell, 6th Baronet was an English poet and critic, the younger brother of the poets and essayists......
Sigfrid Siwertz was a Swedish writer best known for the novel Selambs (1920; Downstream) and for his short stories.......
Siôn Cent was a Welsh religious poet who challenged the values of the bardic tradition. According to Siôn Cent,......
Birger Sjöberg was a songwriter and poet known for his development of a strikingly original form in modern Swedish......
John Skelton was a Tudor poet and satirist of both political and religious subjects whose reputation as an English......
Constance Lindsay Skinner was a Canadian-born American writer, critic, editor, and historian, remembered for her......
Jan Jacob Slauerhoff was a Dutch poet whose romanticism led him to go to sea as a ship’s doctor and whose pessimistic......
Pencho Petkov Slaveykov was a Bulgarian writer who, with his father, Petko Rachev, introduced contemporary ideas......
Petko Rachev Slaveykov was a writer who helped to enrich Bulgarian literature by establishing a modern literary......
Kenneth Slessor was an Australian poet and journalist best known for his poems “Beach Burial,” a moving tribute......
Christopher Smart was an English religious poet, best known for A Song to David (1763), in praise of the author......
A.J.M. Smith was a Canadian poet, anthologist, and critic who was a leader in the revival of Canadian poetry of......
Charlotte Smith was an English novelist and poet, highly praised by the novelist Sir Walter Scott. Her poetic attitude......
Eliza Roxey Snow Smith was an American Mormon leader and poet, a major figure in defining the role of Mormon women......
Horace Smith was an English poet, novelist, and stockbroker who coauthored (with an older brother, James) Rejected......
Stevie Smith was a British poet who expressed an original and visionary personality in her work, combining a lively......
Tracy K. Smith is an American poet and author whose writing often confronts formidable themes of loss and grief,......
William Jay Smith was an American lyric poet who was known for his precision and craftsmanship and for his variety......
Tobias Smollett was a Scottish satirical novelist, best known for his picaresque novels The Adventures of Roderick......
W.D. Snodgrass was an American poet whose early work is distinguished by a careful attention to form and by a relentless......
Carl Johan Gustaf, Count Snoilsky was a Swedish poet who was the most notable of a group of early realist poets.......
Snorri Sturluson was an Icelandic poet, historian, and chieftain, author of the Prose Edda and the Heimskringla.......
Gary Snyder is an American poet early identified with the Beat movement and, from the late 1960s, an important......
Ousmane Socé was a Senegalese writer and politician who was one of the first novelists of his country. After attending......
Dhionísios, Count Solomós was the first poet of modern Greece to show the capabilities of Demotic Greek when inspired......
Somadeva was a Kashmiri Brahman of the Śaiva sect and Sanskrit writer who preserved much of India’s ancient folklore......
William Somerville was a British writer who, after studies directed toward a career at law, lived the life of a......
Sordello was the most renowned Provençal troubadour of Italian birth, whose planh, or lament, on the death of his......
Gilbert Sorrentino was an American poet and experimental novelist, whose use of devices such as nonchronological......
Philippe Soupault was a French poet and novelist who was instrumental in founding the Surrealist movement. Soupault’s......
William Soutar was a Scottish poet, second in importance to Hugh MacDiarmid among the writers of the Scottish Renaissance......
Robert Southey was an English poet and writer of miscellaneous prose who is chiefly remembered for his association......
Robert Southwell was an English poet and martyr remembered for his saintly life as a Jesuit priest and missionary......
Wole Soyinka is a Nigerian playwright and political activist who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1986.......
Aléxandros Soútsos was a Greek poet who founded the Greek Romantic school of poetry. Soútsos studied in Chios (Khíos)......
Muriel Spark was a British writer best known for the satire and wit with which the serious themes of her novels......
Sir Stephen Spender was an English poet and critic, who made his reputation in the 1930s with poems expressing......