Poets A-K Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Jakob Daniel Du Toit was an Afrikaaner poet, pastor, biblical scholar, and the compiler of an Afrikaans Psalter......
Louis Dudek was a Canadian poet noted for his development of the nonnarrative long poem. Educated at McGill University......
Carol Ann Duffy is a British poet whose well-known and well-liked poetry engaged such topics as gender and oppression,......
Alan Dugan was an American poet who wrote with bemused sarcasm about mundane topics, infusing them with irony.......
Henry Dumas was an African-American author of poetry and fiction who wrote about the clash between black and white......
Dunash Ben Labrat was a Hebrew poet, grammarian, and polemicist who was the first to use Arabic metres in his verse,......
Alice Dunbar Nelson was a novelist, poet, essayist, and critic associated with the early period of the Harlem Renaissance......
Paul Laurence Dunbar was a U.S. author whose reputation rests upon his verse and short stories written in black......
William Dunbar was a Middle Scots poet attached to the court of James IV. He was the dominant figure among the......
Robert Duncan was an American poet, a leader of the Black Mountain group of poets in the 1950s. Duncan attended......
Ronald Duncan was a British playwright, poet, and man of letters whose verse plays express the contrast between......
Douglas Dunn is a Scottish writer and critic best known for his poems evoking working-class British life. Dunn......
Paul Durcan is an Irish poet whose work displays a desire to surprise the reader by resorting to surrealist eccentricity.......
Lawrence Durrell was an English novelist, poet, and writer of topographical books, verse plays, and farcical short......
José de Santa Rita Durão was a Brazilian epic poet, best known for his long poem Caramúru. Durão was a pioneer......
Timothy Dwight was an American educator, theologian, and poet who had a strong instructive influence during his......
Alexander Dyce was a Scottish editor whose works, characterized by scrupulous care and integrity, contributed to......
John Dyer was a British poet chiefly remembered for “Grongar Hill” (1726), a short descriptive and meditative poem,......
Sir Edward Dyer was an English courtier and poet whose reputation rests on a small number of ascribed lyrics in......
Adolf Dygasiński was a Polish short-story author and poet who is considered one of the outstanding Polish Naturalist......
Bob Dylan is an American folksinger and songwriter who moved from folk to rock music in the 1960s, infusing the......
Theodor Däubler was a German-language poet whose extraordinary vitality, poetic vision, and optimism contrast sharply......
Paul Déroulède was a French politician, poet, and dramatist who promoted an alliance between France and Russia.......
Tibor Déry was a Hungarian novelist, short-story writer, poet, and playwright, one of the most respected and controversial......
Gabriele D’Annunzio was an Italian poet, novelist, dramatist, short-story writer, journalist, military hero, and......
Eben Fardd was a Welsh-language poet, the last of the 19th-century bards to contribute works of genuine poetic......
Richard Eberhart was an American poet and teacher who was noted for his lyric verse and for his mentorship of aspiring......
Esteban Echeverría was a poet, fiction writer, cultural promoter, and political activist who played a significant......
Frederik Willem van Eeden was a Dutch writer and physician whose works reflect his lifelong search for a social......
Egill Skallagrímsson was one of the greatest of Icelandic skaldic poets, whose adventurous life and verses are......
José María Eguren was a poet considered one of the leading post-Modernist poets of Peru. His first book of poetry,......
Joseph, baron von Eichendorff was a poet and novelist, considered one of the great German Romantic lyricists. From......
Eilhart Von Oberg was a German poet important in the history of the court epic and the development of the Tristan......
Gunnar Ekelöf was an outstanding Swedish poet and essayist. Ekelöf exerted great influence on his contemporaries.......
Ekkehard I the Elder was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius,......
Eknath was a poet-saint and mystic of Vaishnavism, the branch of Hinduism that reveres the deity Vishnu and his......
Recaizade Mahmud Ekrem was a writer who was one of the outstanding figures in 19th-century Turkish literature.......
T.S. Eliot was an American-English poet, playwright, literary critic, and editor, a leader of the Modernist movement......
Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet was an American historical writer, best remembered for her several extensive volumes......
Max Elskamp was one of the outstanding Belgian Symbolist poets, whose material was the everyday life and folklore......
Willem Elsschot was a Flemish novelist and poet, the author of a small but remarkable oeuvre, whose laconic style......
Odysseus Elytis was a Greek poet and winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize for Literature. Born the scion of a prosperous......
Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American lecturer, poet, and essayist, the leading exponent of New England Transcendentalism.......
Mihail Eminescu was a poet who transformed both the form and content of Romanian poetry, creating a school of poetry......
Empedocles was a Greek philosopher, statesman, poet, religious teacher, and physiologist. According to legend only,......
William Empson was an English critic and poet known for his immense influence on 20th-century literary criticism......
Juan del Encina was a playwright, poet, priest, and composer of secular vocal music, who was the first Spanish......
Rabbe Enckell was a Finnish poet, playwright, and critic, a leading representative of the Swedo-Finnish poetic......
Quintus Ennius was an epic poet, dramatist, and satirist, the most influential of the early Latin poets, rightly......
Magnus Felix Ennodius was a Latin poet, prose writer, rhetorician, and bishop, some of whose prose works are valuable......
D.J. Enright was a British poet, novelist, and teacher. After receiving a master’s degree at the University of......
Saint Ephraem Syrus ; Western feast day June 9, Eastern feast day January 28) was a Christian theologian, poet,......
Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga was a Spanish poet, known as the author of La Araucana (1569–89), the most celebrated......
Erinna was a Greek poet of the Aegean island of Telos, known in antiquity for “The Distaff,” a hexameter poem of......
Thorsteinn Erlingsson was an Icelandic poet whose satirical and rebellious writing was always softened by his own......
Paul Ernst was a German writer known particularly for his short stories and for essays on philosophical, economic,......
Pedro de Espinosa was a Spanish poet and editor of the anthology Flores de poetas ilustres de España (1605; “Flowers......
José de Espronceda y Delgado was a Romantic poet and revolutionary, often called the Spanish Lord Byron. He fled......
Euphorion was a Greek poet and grammarian, of Chalcis in Euboea, whose poetry was highly regarded in Hellenistic......
Laurence Eusden was a British poet who, by flattering the Duke of Newcastle, was made poet laureate in 1718. He......
Evan Evans was a Welsh poet and antiquary, one of the principal figures in the mid-18th-century revival of Welsh......
Mari Evans was an African American author of poetry, children’s literature, and plays. Evans attended the University......
Percival Everett is an American writer whose works reflect a wide range of subjects and styles and often deal head-on......
William Everson was an American Roman Catholic poet whose works record a personal search for religious vision in......
Johannes Ewald was one of Denmark’s greatest lyric poets and the first to use themes from early Scandinavian myths......
Gavin Ewart was a British poet noted for his light verse, which frequently dealt with sexual themes. He also wrote......
Frederick William Faber was a British theologian, noted hymnist, and founder of the Wilfridians, a religious society......
Robert Faesi was a Swiss poet, dramatist, short-story writer, and literary critic, noted for his trilogy of novels......
Edward Fairfax was an English poet whose Godfrey of Bulloigne or the Recoverie of Jerusalem (1600), a translation......
Gustav Falke was a German poet and novelist prominent among the new lyric poets of the late 19th and early 20th......
Sir Richard Fanshawe, 1st Baronet was an English poet, translator, and diplomat whose version of Camões’ Os Lusíadas......
al-Farazdaq was an Arab poet famous for his satires in a period when poetry was an important political instrument.......
Léon-Paul Fargue was a French poet and essayist whose work spanned numerous literary movements. Before he reached......
Nabile Farès was a Kabylian novelist and poet known for his abstruse, poetic, and dreamlike style. Rebellion against......
William Faulkner was an American novelist and short-story writer who was awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize for Literature.......
Jessie Redmon Fauset was an African American novelist, critic, poet, and editor known for her discovery and encouragement......
Kenneth Fearing was an American poet and novelist who used an array of topical phrases and idiom in his satires......
Elaine Feinstein was a British writer and translator who examined her own eastern European heritage in a number......
León Felipe was a Spanish poet known chiefly as a poet of the Spanish Civil War. After performing across Spain......
Fenestella was a Latin poet and annalist whose lost work, the Annales, apparently contained a valuable store of......
Ernest F. Fenollosa was an American Orientalist and educator who made a significant contribution to the preservation......
Elijah Fenton was an English poet perhaps best known for his collaboration in a translation of the Greek epic poem......
James Fenton is an English poet and journalist who was remarked upon for his facility with a wide variety of verse......
Ferdowsī was a Persian poet, author of the Shāh-nāmeh (“Book of Kings”), the Persian national epic, to which he......
Robert Fergusson was a Scottish poet who was one of the leading figures of the 18th-century revival of Scots vernacular......
Lawrence Ferlinghetti was an American poet, one of the founders of the Beat movement in San Francisco in the mid-1950s.......
Roberto Fernández Retamar was a Cuban poet, essayist, and literary critic and cultural spokesman for the regime......
António Ferreira was a Portuguese poet who was influential in fostering the new Renaissance style of poetry and......
Manuel Ferreira was a Portuguese-born scholar and fiction writer whose work centred on African themes. After Ferreira’s......
Rosario Ferré was a short-story writer, novelist, critic, and professor, and one of the leading women authors in......
Afanasy Afanasyevich Fet was a Russian poet and translator, whose sincere and passionate lyric poetry strongly......
Eugene Field was an American poet and journalist, best known, to his disgust, as the “poet of childhood.” Field......
Robert Finch was an American-born Canadian poet whose gift for satire found an outlet in lyrics characterized by......
Johann Fischart was a German satirist, the principal German literary opponent of the Counter-Reformation. Fischart......
Dudley Fitts was an American teacher, critic, poet, and translator, best known for his contemporary English versions......
Edward FitzGerald was an English writer, best known for his Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, which, though it is a very......
R.D. FitzGerald was an Australian poet known for his technical skill and seriousness. FitzGerald studied science......
Robert Fitzgerald was an American poet, educator, and critic who was best known for his translations of Greek classics.......
Hildegarde Flanner was an American poet, essayist, and playwright known for her traditional poems that conjured......
Richard Flecknoe was an English poet, dramatist, and traveller, whose writings are notable for both the praise......