poetry
(ˈpəʊɪtrɪ)
Forms: 4–7 poetrie, 5 -trye, -terye, 6 Sc. poyetrie, 5– poetry.
[ME. = OF. poetrie, poeterie (13–14th c.), old It. poetr{iacu}a (Florio); ad. late and med.L. poetrīa, f. poēta poet.
Poetria occurs in a scholium on Horace Epist. ii. i. 103, written (according to O. Keller, Pseudacro) c 650, perh. in North Italy, and preserved in MSS. of 10th c.; also in 9th or 10th c. MSS. of Martianus Capella. It is used as the title of treatises on the art of poetry, esp. the Nova Poetria of Gaufrei de Vinsauf (Galfridus de Vino Salvo, also called Galfridus Anglicus) about or soon after 1200; and in various works of the 13th c., as the Græcismus of Eberhardus Bethuniensis c 1212 (‘Arte poetria fungor dum fingo poema’), the translation of Averroes' paraphrase of Aristotle's Poetics by Hermannus Alemannus c 1260, and the Catholicon of Joannes de Janua, 1286 (‘a poeta, poeticus, et hæc poetria ars poetica’). (I. Bywater.) The relation of the word to L. poētria, Gr. ποιήτρια, poetess, is not clear; but, from its antiquity, its formative suffix cannot be identified with F. -erie, Eng. -ery, -ry, in such words as chirurgery, drollery, bigotry, mimicry. Our earliest English examples are from Chaucer, to whom the Nova Poetria of Galfridus was well known, as he makes the Nun's Priest refer to it in his Tale (l. 527) and apostrophize the author as ‘O Gaufred deere Maister souerayn’.]
I. In obsolete senses.
† 1. A rendering of med.L. poetrīa in sense of an ars poetica or treatise on the art of poetry. Obs.
1447 O. Bokenham Seyntys Introd. (Roxb.) 3 Galfridus Anglicus in hys newe poetrye. |
† 2. Applied to imaginative or creative literature in general; fable, fiction:
cf. poet n. 1 b.
Obs.c 1384 Chaucer H. Fame ii. 493 When thou redest poetrie How goddes gonne stellifye Briddes fisshe best. 1387 Trevisa Higden (Rolls) II. 279 Of þe bryngynge forþ of mawmetrie com wel nyh al þe feyninge of poetrie [L. De ortu idolatriæ omnia pene figmenta manarunt; 1432–50 Alle figmentes toke begynnenge allemoste of ydolatry]. 1484 Caxton Fables of æsop ii. Proem, Fable is as moche to seye in poeterye as wordes in theologye. 1530 Tindale Pract. Prelates Wks. (Parker Soc.) II. 268 They..feigned Miracles, and gaue themselues only unto poetry, and shut up the scripture. 1601 Holland Pliny II. 607 Their profession of Poëtry, that is to say, of faining and deuising fables, may in some sort excuse them. |
II. In existing use.
3. The art or work of the poet:
a. With special reference to its form: Composition in verse or metrical language, or in some equivalent patterned arrangement of language; usually also with choice of elevated words and figurative uses, and option of a syntactical order, differing more or less from those of ordinary speech or prose writing.
In this sense, poetry in its simplest or lowest form has been identified with versification or verse:
cf. quots. 1658, 1755.
1386 Chaucer Clerk's Prol. 33 Fraunceys Petrak..whos Rethorik sweete Enlumyned al Ytaille of poetrie, As Lynyan dide of Philosophie. 1412–20 Lydg. Chron. Troy iii. xxv. (MS. Digby 230), Til þat he [Chaucer] came and with his poetrye Gan our tunge first to magnifye. c 1440 Promp. Parv. 406/2 Poetrye, poetria. 1509 Hawes Past. Pleas. (Percy Soc.) 2 Nothinge I am experte in poetry, As the monke of Bury, floure of eloquence. 1567 Satir. Poems Reform. vi. 9 Thair plesand flowre of Poyetrie. 1586 W. Webbe Eng. Poetrie (Arb.) 21 Poetrie..may properly be defined, the arte of making: which word as it hath alwaies beene especially vsed of the best of our English Poets, to expresse ye very faculty of speaking or wryting Poetically. 1658 Phillips, Poesie, or Poetry, the art of making a Poem, i. any kind of subject consisting of Rythm or Verses. 1727–41 Chambers Cycl. s.v., The rules of poetry and versifying are taught by art, and acquired by study... Its matter, long and short syllables, and feet composed hereof, with words furnished by grammar; and its form, the arrangement of all these things in just and agreeable verse, expressing the thoughts and sentiments of the author. 1755 Johnson, Poetry, metrical composition; the art or practice of writing poems. 1838 Thirlwall Greece II. xii. 116 The first period of Greek poetry..is entirely filled by the names of Homer and Hesiod. 1906 J. W. Mackail (Communicated), In general, the essence of poetry as an art is not so much that it is rhythmical (which all elevated language is), or that it is metrical (which not all poetry is, except by a considerable extension of the meaning of the word), as that it is patterned language. This is its specific quality as a ‘fine art’. The essence of ‘pattern’ (in its technical use, as applied to the arts) as distinct from ‘composition’ generally, is that it is composition which has what is technically called a ‘repeat’; and it is the ‘repeat’ which technically differentiates poetry from non-poetry, both being (as arts) ‘composition’. The ‘repeat’ may be obvious, as in the case of rhymed lines of equal length, or it may be more implicit, to any degree of subtlety; but if it does not exist, there is technically no poetry. The artistic power of the pattern-designer is shown in the way he deals with the problem of ‘repeat’; and this is true of poetry likewise, and is probably the key (so far as one exists) to any technical definition or discussion of the art. |
b. The product of this art as a form of literature; the writings of a poet or poets; poems collectively or generally; metrical work or composition; verse. (Opp. to
prose.)
1586 Webbe Eng. Poetrie 28 The first wryters of Poetry among the Latines, shoulde seeme to be those, which excelled in the framing of Commedies. 1588 Shakes. Tit. A. iv. i. 14 Cornelia neuer with more care Read to her sonnes, then she hath read to thee, Sweet Poetry, and Tullies Oratour. 1749 Numbers in Poet. Comp. 75 Speak here..of the several Sorts of English Poetry, as divided into Heroic, Pastoral, Elegy, Satire, Comedy, Tragedy, Epigram and Lyric. 1763 J. Brown Poetry & Mus. xiii. 223 If the Poet select and adapt proper Music to his Poem; or the Musician select and adapt proper Poetry to his Music. 1798 Wordsw. Lyr. Ballads (ed. 2) Pref. note, I here use the word ‘Poetry’ (though against my own judgment) as opposed to the word Prose, and synonymous with metrical composition. But..the only strict antithesis to Prose is Metre; nor is this, in truth, a strict antithesis. 1807 Edin. Rev. XI. 216 The end of poetry..is to please—and the name, we think, is strictly applicable to every metrical composition from which we receive pleasure, without any laborious exercise of the understanding. 1828 Whately Rhet. in Encycl. Metrop. I. 290/1 Good Poetry might be defined, ‘Elegant and decorated language in metre, expressing such and such thoughts’. 1846 Wright Ess. Mid. Ages II. 39 Poetry was the only form of literary composition found in the primeval age. |
c. With special reference to its function: The expression or embodiment of beautiful or elevated thought, imagination, or feeling, in language adapted to stir the imagination and emotions, both immediately and also through the harmonic suggestions latent in or implied by the words and connexions of words actually used, such language containing a rhythmical element and having usually a metrical form (as in sense 3 a); though the term is sometimes extended to include expression in non-metrical language having similar harmonic and emotional qualities (
prose-poetry).
1581 Sidney Apol. Poetrie (Arb.) 28 Verse being but an ornament and no cause to Poetry: sith there haue beene many most excellent Poets, that neuer versified. 1588 Shakes. L.L.L. iv. ii. 165, I will proue those Verses to be very vnlearned, neither sauouring of Poetrie, Wit, nor Inuention. 1689–90 Temple Ess. Poetry Wks. 1731 I. 235 Nor is it any great Wonder that such Force should be found in Poetry, since in it are assembled all the Powers of Eloquence, of Musick, and of Picture, which are all allowed to make so strong Impressions upon humane Minds. 1779–81 Johnson L.P., Waller Wks. II. 267 The essence of poetry is invention; such invention as, by producing something unexpected, surprises and delights... Poetry pleases by exhibiting an idea more grateful to the mind than things themselves afford. 1798 Wordsw. Lyr. Ballads (ed. 2) Pref., Poetry is the breath and finer spirit of all knowledge; it is the impassioned expression which is in the countenance of all Science. 1853 Robertson Serm. Ser. ii. xx, All Christ's teaching is a Divine Poetry, luxuriant in metaphor, overflowing with truth too large for accurate sentences, truth which only a heart alive can appreciate. a 1854 H. Reed Lect. Brit. Poets vi. (1857) 220 A strain of prose which is poetry in all but poetry's metrical music. 1885 Watts-Dunton in Encycl. Brit. XIX. 257/2 Absolute poetry is the concrete and artistic expression of the human mind in emotional and rhythmical language. 1906 W. B. Yeats Poems Pref., Poetry..is in the last analysis an endeavour to condense as out of the flying vapours of the world an image of human perfection, and for its own and not for the art's sake. |
d. Extended (with reference to the etymology) to creative or imaginative art in general.
rare.
[1815 D. Stewart in Encycl. Brit., Suppl. I. 5 note, The latitude given by D'Alembert to the meaning of the word Poetry is a real and very important improvement on Bacon, who restricts it to fictitious History or Fables... D'Alembert, on the other hand, employs it in its natural signification, as synonymous with invention or creation.] 1856 Ruskin Mod. Paint. III. iv. i. §15 Painting is properly to be opposed to speaking or writing, but not to poetry. Both painting and speaking are methods of expression. Poetry is the employment of either for the noblest purposes. |
4. pl. Pieces of poetry; poems collectively.
rare.
c 1384 Chaucer H. Fame iii. 388 Oon seyde Omere was [v.r. made] lyes Feynynge in hys Poetries. 1587 Golding De Mornay xxiv. (1592) 372 What shall we say then to the Poetries [of our Scriptures], specially of Dauid, considering that he was afore all the Poetries of the Heathen? 1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. Boccalini's Advts. fr. Parnass. 284 Desired that she might see both their Poetries; which after she had perused several times, and duly considered them, she..chose Mauro's Fava. 1818 Scott Rob Roy xxiii, And this young birkie here,..will his stage plays and his poetries help him here, d'ye think..?—Will Tityre tu patulæ, as they ca' it, tell him where Rashleigh Osbaldistone is? 1886 M. F. Tupper My Life as Author 222 If some few have appeared among other poetries in print, they shall not be repeated here. |
5. fig. Something resembling or compared to poetry; poetical quality, spirit, or feeling. Phr.
poetry of the foot or
poetry of motion: dancing.
1664 Dryden Rival Ladies iii. 32 The Poetry of the foot takes most of late. 1813 Lady Morgan Wild Irish Girl (ed. 5) II. xix. 156, ‘I seldom dance,’ said I—‘Ill health has for some time coincided with my inclination, which seldom led me to try my skill at the Poetry of Motion.’ 1816 Keats Sonn. Grasshopper & Cricket, The poetry of earth is never dead:..a voice will run..about the new⁓mown mead; That is the Grasshopper's. 1817 Coleridge Biog. Lit. II. xiv. 1 The sudden charm, which accidents of light and shade, which moon-light or sun-set diffused over a known and familiar landscape..these are the poetry of nature. 1818 Byron Ch. Har. iv. lviii. 32 That music in itself, whose sounds are song, The poetry of speech. 1846 Mackay Poems, Railways 1 ‘No poetry in railways!’ foolish thought Of a dull brain, to no fine music wrought. c 1863 T. Taylor Ticket-of-leave Man in M. R. Booth Eng. Plays of 19th Cent. (1969) II. 101 Come along, Emily, if you're at liberty to give your Montague a lesson in the poetry of motion. 1874 Blackie Self-Cult. 70 To live poetry, indeed, is always better than to write it. 1874 Hardy Far from Madding Crowd I. ii. 13 The poetry of motion is a phrase much in use. 1946 D. C. Peattie Road of Naturalist iv. 42 There is left only the poetry of speed and wind. 1959 E. H. Clements High Tension i. 10 He had never been back there. He had not..seen poetry in the small exploit. 1975 Times 6 Mar. 13/5 There is a moment of poetry in a sequence where the dancers simply walk about carrying umbrellas. 1975 Listener 4 Dec. 747/2 Raffles..compares the poetry of cricket with the poetry of burglary. 1977 Zigzag Apr. 30/3 This song captures what Television are all about: a kind of poetry in motion with a scorching musical backdrop. |
6. (With capital initial.) The name given to the sixth, or (reckoning the
Preparatory as one, the seventh) class from the bottom or third from the top, in English Roman Catholic schools, seminaries, or colleges, on the continent, and subsequently in England. The class so called comes between
Syntax and
Rhetoric.
1629 [see grammar n. 5 c]. 1679 Trials of White & other Jesuits 56 Fall. I saw him when I was in my Syntax, and now I am in Poetry. 1773 [see grammar n. 5 c]. 1838 C. Waterton Essays on Nat. Hist. p. xxiv, One day, when I was in the class of poetry..about two years before I left the college.., he called me up to his room. 1887 Stonyhurst Mag. Nov. 34/1 Poetry..were granted a most unexpected but none the less welcome holiday on Thursday October 20th. 1906 [‘Still in use at Stonyhurst, etc.; also at St. Edmund's or Douay College, now located at Woolhampton in Berks.’ (Rev. Sir D. O. Hunter Blair, O.S.B.)] 1946 D. Gwynn Bishop Challoner iii. 39 By the summer of 1708 he had passed through the two higher classes of Poetry and Rhetoric. |
7. attrib. and
Comb., as
poetry professorship,
poetry reader,
poetry school,
poetry work-shop;
poetry-loving adj.;
poetry-book, a book containing a collection of poems,
esp. one used in schools;
poetry reading, the reading of poetry,
esp. to an audience; a poetry recital;
poetry recital, a public performance of poetry;
poetry-voice, a pompous or mannered style of writing poetry or reading it aloud.
1847 Thackeray Van. Fair (1848) xii. 103 She wrote whole pages out of *poetry-books without the least pity. 1877 A. B. Edwards (title) A poetry-book of elder poets. 1881 R. L. Stevenson Virginibus Puerisque 176 Whether we regard life as a lane leading to a dead wall..or pule in little atheistic poetry-books about its vanity and brevity [etc.]. 1903 ‘A. McNeill’ Egregious English 102 The demand for poetry-books by new writers has practically ceased to exist. 1935 E. Farjeon Nursery in Nineties v. 271 The poem was ‘good enough’ for the Poetry-Book. 1980 G. Nelson Charity's Child vi. 86 The poetry book, sir. |
1798 Wolcott (P. Pindar) Tales of Hoy Wks. 1812 IV. 410 He scrawls the chairs and tables over, and walls whenever the *poetry-fit is upon him. |
1885 Illustr. Lond. News 7 Nov. 468/3 The book is one on which every *poetry lover should form his own opinion. |
1941 Blunden T. Hardy ii. 34 The change was natural to the period and the *poetry-loving author. 1979 E. Koch Good Night Little Spy iv. 24 A poetry-loving, moon faced charmer. |
1887 Dowden Transcripts (1896) 516 The ignominious years of dreaming, *poetry-making, and the receiving of wretched praise. |
1793 W. B. Stevens Jrnl. 11 Mar. (1965) i. 72 Received a College letter, requesting me to support the pretensions of Mr. Hurdies to the *Poetry Professorship which will be vacant in Michaelmas Term next. |
1940 R. S. Lambert Ariel & all his Quality v. 127 Few *poetry-readers win its [sc. the audience's] general approbation. 1975 ‘G. Black’ Big Wind for Summer ii. 32 The voice of the British Broadcasting Corporation's top poetry reader. |
1917 A. Huxley Let. 11 Dec. (1969) 140 After that to Eliot, whom I found as haggard..as usual; we held a council of war about a *poetry reading, in which both of us are supposed to be performing. 1945 ‘G. Orwell’ in New Saxon Pamphlets iii. 35 That grisly thing, a ‘poetry reading’. 1975 O. Sela Bengali Inheritance xvi. 139 She..organised poetry readings and prescribed reading books. |
1966 J. Betjeman High & Low 73 A *poetry recital we are giving to the troops. 1978 J. Symons Blackheath Poisonings i. 34 The Rink Hall in the village, where the poetry recital was to take place. |
1976 *Poetry school [see poetry workshop below]. |
1846 Thackeray L. Blanchard Wks. 1900 XIII. 477 The young fellow..*poetry-stricken, writing dramatic sketches. |
1971 Guardian 28 Dec. 13/5, I hate the *poetry-voice; the poetry should speak for itself. 1972 Country Life 1 June 1418/3 Stevie Smith..was not one for the Poetry Voice. She mixes nonsense and its opposite. |
1976 Times 1 Mar. 3/1 Mr Lovibond and his supporters..operate a *poetry school and workshop. |
1977 Time Out 28 Jan.–3 Feb. 40/5 Audio-visual poetry workshop last Fri of month. |
Hence
ˈpoetryless a., devoid of poetry.
1854 H. Strickland Trav. Th. 28 A soulless, poetryless, utilitarian, money-making Englishman is bad enough. |
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poetry slam n. orig. U.S. a live poetry competition in which participants recite their work and are judged by members of the audience (
cf. slam n.2 Additions).
1986 Chicago Tribune (Nexis) 29 Aug. 5 Uptown *Poetry Slam 7–10 p.m. Sundays at this former speakeasy. $1 cover. 1997 Touch May 46/1 The Bristol Poetry Slam has even introduced the novel attraction of an Opportunity Knocks-style clapometer to measure audience response at its events. |