Poets L-Z Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Edmund Spenser was an English poet whose long allegorical poem The Faerie Queene is one of the greatest in the......
Henric Laurenszoon Spieghel was a poet of the northern Dutch Renaissance whose highly individual spiritual beliefs......
Carl Spitteler was a Swiss poet of visionary imagination and author of pessimistic yet heroic verse. He was awarded......
Sir J. C. Squire was an English journalist, playwright, a leading poet of the Georgian school, and an influential......
Leopold Staff was an influential poet and translator associated with the Young Poland movement at the end of the......
William Stafford was an American poet whose work explores man’s relationship with nature. He formed the habit of......
Erik Johan Stagnelius was one of the strangest and most romantic of the Swedish Romantic poets. Most of his childhood......
Thomas Stanley was an English poet, translator, and the first English historian of philosophy. Stanley was the......
Statius was one of the principal Roman epic and lyric poets of the Silver Age of Latin literature (ad 18–133).......
C.K. Stead is a New Zealand poet and novelist who gained an international reputation as a critic with The New Poetic:......
Edmund Clarence Stedman was a poet, critic, and editor, whose writing was popular in the United States during the......
Danielle Steel is an American writer best known for her numerous best-selling romance novels. Steel was an only......
Davíð Stefánsson was an Icelandic poet and novelist, best known as a poet of humanity. Stefánsson came of a cultured......
Gertrude Stein was an avant-garde American writer, eccentric, and self-styled genius whose Paris home was a salon......
Stephan G. Stephansson was an Icelandic-born poet who wrote virtually all his poems in North America. The son of......
Alfred George Stephens was an Australian literary critic and journalist whose writings in newspapers and periodicals......
James Stephens was an Irish poet and storyteller whose pantheistic philosophy is revealed in his fairy tales set......
Stesichorus was a Greek poet known for his distinctive choral lyric verse on epic themes. His name was originally......
Wallace Stevens was an American poet whose work explores the interaction of reality and what man can make of reality......
Robert Louis Stevenson was a Scottish essayist, poet, and author of fiction and travel books, best known for his......
Douglas Stewart was a poet, playwright, and critic who helped establish an Australian national tradition through......
Maria Stewart was an American writer, lecturer, teacher, and activist who was the first known American woman to......
Georg Stiernhielm was a poet and scholar, often called “the father of Swedish poetry.” Stiernhielm, the son of......
Richard Henry Stoddard was an American poet, critic, and editor, more important as a figure in New York literary......
Friedrich Leopold, Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg was a German lyric poet of the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress)......
Theodor Woldsen Storm was a poet and novelist whose novellas are among the finest in German literature. He is an......
Alfonsina Storni was one of the foremost poets in Latin American literature. Storni’s family immigrated to Argentina......
Randolph Stow was an Australian novelist and poet noted for his economical style and great powers of description.......
Moritz, count von Strachwitz was a German poet remembered for his Neue Gedichte (“New Poems”), which included such......
Mark Strand was a Canadian poet, writer of short fiction, and translator whose poetry, noted for its surreal quality,......
Michael Strange was an American writer and performer who produced poetry and plays, acted onstage, and did readings......
Su Shi was one of China’s greatest poets and essayists, who was also an accomplished calligrapher and a public......
Sir John Suckling was an English Cavalier poet, dramatist, and courtier, best known for his lyrics. He was educated......
Sugawara Michizane was a Japanese political figure and scholar of Chinese literature of the Heian period, who was......
Sully Prudhomme was a French poet who was a leading member of the Parnassian movement, which sought to restore......
Aleksandr Petrovich Sumarokov was a Russian Neoclassical poet and dramatist, director of the first permanent theatre......
Jules Supervielle was a poet, dramatist, and short-story writer of Basque descent who wrote in the French language......
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey was a poet who, with Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503–42), introduced into England the styles......
Efua Sutherland was a Ghanaian playwright, poet, teacher, and children’s author, who founded the Drama Studio in......
Avrom Sutzkever was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna......
May Swenson was an American poet whose work is noted for its engaging imagery, intricate wordplay, and eccentric......
Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish author, who was the foremost prose satirist in the English language. Besides......
Algernon Charles Swinburne was an English poet and critic, outstanding for prosodic innovations and noteworthy......
Josuah Sylvester was an English poet-translator, best known as the translator of a popular biblical epic, the Divine......
John Addington Symonds was an English essayist, poet, and biographer best known for his cultural history of the......
Arthur Symons was a poet and critic, the first English champion of the French Symbolist poets. Symons’s schooling......
Wisława Szymborska was a Polish poet whose intelligent and empathic explorations of philosophical, moral, and ethical......
Francisco de Sá de Miranda was a Portuguese poet who introduced Renaissance poetic forms to Portugal. The illegitimate......
Mário de Sá-Carneiro was a poet and novelist, one of the most original and complex figures of the Portuguese Modernist......
Jean Sénac was a French-language poet active in the cause of national literature in Algeria. Sénac’s early poetry,......
Edith Södergran was a Swedish-Finnish poet whose expressionistic work influenced a generation of Finnish and Swedish......
Süleyman Çelebi was one of the most famous early poets of Anatolia. Süleyman appears to have been the son of an......
Mikołaj Sęp Szarzyński was a Polish religious poet remembered for writing metaphysical sonnets with inverted word......
Antoni Słonimski was a Polish poet, translator, and newspaper columnist known for his devotion to pacifism and......
Juliusz Słowacki was a Polish poet and dramatic author, one of the most important poets of the Romantic period.......
Sōchō was a Japanese renga (“linked-verse”) poet and chronicler of the late Muromachi period (1338–1573) who, along......
Sūrdās, (fl. 16th century, probably in Braj, India; traditionally b. 1483—d. 1563), North Indian devotional poet......
Genevieve Taggard was an American poet and biographer of Emily Dickinson who was much admired for her lyric verse......
Rabindranath Tagore was a Bengali poet, short-story writer, song composer, playwright, essayist, and painter who......
Takahama Kyoshi was a haiku poet, a major figure in the development of haiku literature in modern Japan. Through......
Taliesin was one of five poets renowned among the Welsh in the latter part of the 6th century, according to the......
Tannhäuser was a German lyric poet who became the hero of a popular legend. As a professional minnesinger, he served......
Dorothea Tanning was an American artist and author who, during her seven-decade career, moved between painting,......
Tansen was an Indian musician and poet who was an important figure in the North Indian tradition of Hindustani......
Tao Qian was one of China’s greatest poets and a noted recluse. Born into an impoverished aristocratic family,......
Richard Tarlton was an English actor, ballad writer, favourite jester of Queen Elizabeth I, and the most popular......
Bernardo Tasso was an Italian courtier and poet who was the father of Torquato Tasso, the greatest Italian poet......
Torquato Tasso was the greatest Italian poet of the late Renaissance, celebrated for his heroic epic poem Gerusalemme......
Alessandro Tassoni was an Italian political writer, literary critic, and poet, remembered for his mock-heroic satiric......
Allen Tate was an American poet, teacher, novelist, and a leading exponent of the New Criticism. In both his criticism......
James Tate was an American poet noted for the surreal imagery, subversive humour, and unsettling profundity of......
Nahum Tate was a poet laureate of England and playwright, adapter of other’s plays, and collaborator with Nicholas......
Eugénio Tavares was a Cape Verdean poet who was one of the first Cape Verdeans to be published in the islands’......
Edward Taylor was one of the foremost poets in colonial British North America. Unwilling to subscribe to the required......
John Taylor was a minor English poet, pamphleteer, and journalist who called himself “the Water Poet.” The son......
Saul Tchernichowsky was a prolific Hebrew poet, whose poetry, in strongly biblical language, dealt with Russia,......
Tchicaya U Tam’si was a Congolese French-language writer and poet whose work explores the relationships between......
Sara Teasdale was an American poet whose short, personal lyrics were noted for their classical simplicity and quiet......
Esaias Tegnér was a Swedish teacher, bishop, and the most popular poet of his period. When Tegnér was nine his......
Herman Teirlinck was a Flemish novelist, poet, short-story writer, essayist, and playwright who is considered one......
Telesilla was a Greek poet noted for saving the city of Argos from attack by Cleomenes and his Spartan troops after......
Francisco José Tenreiro was an African poet writing in Portuguese whose poems express the sufferings caused by......
Terpander was a Greek poet and musician of the Aegean island of Lesbos. Terpander was proverbially famous as a......
Lucy Terry was a poet, storyteller, and activist of colonial and postcolonial America. Terry was taken from Africa......
Kazimierz Tetmajer was a poet and short-story writer who was a member of the Young Poland movement. Tetmajer belonged......
Tevfik Fikret was a poet who is considered the founder of the modern school of Turkish poetry. The son of an Ottoman......
Celia Laighton Thaxter was an American poet whose work centred thematically on the islands and ocean of her youth.......
Theobald I was the count of Troyes and of Champagne (from 1201), as Theobald IV, and king of Navarre (from 1234).......
Theocritus was a Greek poet, the creator of pastoral poetry. His poems were termed eidyllia (“idylls”), a diminutive......
Theodulf of Orléans was a prelate, poet, and one of the leading theologians of the Frankish empire. A member of......
Theognis was an ancient Greek elegiac poet whose work preserved a glimpse into Greek society in a time of turmoil.......
Thespis was a Greek poet, said to have been born in the deme (district) of Icaria. According to ancient tradition,......
Marcel Thiry was a Belgian poet, novelist, short-story writer, and essayist whose work reflects his experiences......
Thomas The Rhymer was a Scottish poet and prophet who was likely the author of the metrical romance Sir Tristrem,......
D.M. Thomas was an English poet and novelist best known for his novel The White Hotel (1981), in which fantasy......
Dylan Thomas was a Welsh poet and prose writer whose work is known for its comic exuberance, rhapsodic lilt, and......
Edward Thomas was an English writer who turned to poetry only after a long career spent producing nature studies......
R.S. Thomas was a Welsh clergyman and poet whose lucid, austere verse expresses an undeviating affirmation of the......
William Thomas was a clergyman and poet, considered the only successful practitioner of the long Welsh poem in......
Francis Thompson was an English poet of the 1890s, whose most famous poem, “The Hound of Heaven,” describes the......