- Source: Light poetry
Light poetry or light verse is poetry that attempts to be humorous. Light poems are usually brief, can be on a frivolous or serious subject, and often feature word play including puns, adventurous rhyme, and heavy alliteration. Typically, light verse in English is formal verse, although a few free verse poets have excelled at light verse outside the formal verse tradition.
While light poetry is sometimes condemned as doggerel or thought of as poetry composed casually, humor often makes a serious point in a subtle or subversive way. Many of the most renowned "serious" poets, such as Horace, Swift, Pope, and Auden, also excelled at light verse.
Notable poets
= English
== German
== Dutch
=Publications
Seaver, Robert (1908), Ye butcher, ye baker, ye candlestick-maker Houghton Mifflin Company. Being sundry amusing and instructive verses for both old and young, adorned with numerous woodcuts
The following periodicals regularly publish light verse:
Able Muse
Light (formerly Light Quarterly), a journal of light verse
The Spectator runs regular light verse competitions
The Washington Post runs regular light verse competitions as part of its Style Invitational
See also
Alla barnen
Clerihew
Double dactyl
Epigram
Limerick
McWhirtle
Michael Braude Award for Light Verse
Nonsense verse
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- The Charge of the Light Brigade (puisi)
- Rap
- Wu Kang-ren
- Mahmoud Darwish
- Britania Raya
- Lana Rhoades
- William Cowper
- Seamus Heaney
- Jim Morrison
- Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom
- Light poetry
- Poetry
- Jellicle cats
- Vaudeville
- James Merrill
- Costa Book Awards
- Child of Light
- Electric Light (poetry collection)
- Apollo
- Comedy