Cover of the 2016 Society of Classical Poets Journal featuring classical art
There is a distinct weight to a collection that insists on structure in an era often defined by free verse. The 2016 release from the Society of Classical Poets operates not merely as an anthology, but as a deliberate argument for the endurance of rhyme and meter. It suggests that the old scaffolds—the sonnet, the villanelle, the strict couplet—remain the most sturdy vessels for contemporary thought.
At the forefront of this volume stand the voices who have mastered the discipline required to make constraints feel like liberation. The competition winners—Ron L. Hodges, Bruce Dale Wise, Daniel Magdalen, and Dusty Grein, among others—demonstrate that form does not stifle creativity. Instead, it distills it.
Alongside James Sale, Reid McGrath, and Matthew Walton, these poets navigate modern themes through traditional architecture. The journal expands its reach further, incorporating a vast array of featured poets such as Michael R. Burch and Elizabeth Spencer Spragins. Their work sits side-by-side, creating a texture that feels less like a competition and more like a choral arrangement, where distinct voices harmonize through shared adherence to craft.
A unique strength of this edition lies in how it refuses to isolate the present from the past. Modern verses are not presented in a vacuum; they share pages with the giants who laid the pavement. Readers encounter the ghosts of William Blake and John Donne, the brooding romanticism of Keats, and the sharp clarity of Robert Frost.
The inclusion of these masters—ranging from the Elizabethan precision of Shakespeare to the contemplative lines of Rilke—serves a dual purpose. It anchors the contemporary work in a lineage, proving that the torch has been passed, and it offers a comparative study on how the English language has shifted while its rhythmic roots remain intertwined.
Beyond the poetry itself, the 2016 Journal functions as a practical instrument for preservation. It houses a “mini-textbook” designed for educators, stripping away the intimidation often associated with teaching classical forms. This inclusion transforms the book from a passive reading experience into an active tool for the classroom, aiming to hand the chisel to a new generation of sculptors.
The aesthetic experience is rounded out by an appreciation for visual classicism. The cover and interior feature works by artists like Steven J. Levin, whose piece “Metamorphosis” sets a tone of transformation and realism. The interplay between the visual art of Anna Rose Bain or Xiqiang Dong and the textual rhythms of the poets creates a multi-sensory validation of classical beauty.
An interview with William Ruleman, Professor of English at Tennessee Wesleyan College, offers the final intellectual anchor, providing context to the creative works. This volume is a substantial artifact, expansive in its scope, affirming that the classical tradition is not a relic to be dusted off, but a living method of understanding the world.
Joining Shen Yun in 2007, Angelia Wang (b. Xi'an, China) represents a benchmark in the…
"We're a team." It is a simple phrase, just three words, yet it holds more…
In the high-stakes theater of grand opera, survival requires a bifurcation of the self. For…
They say the second year of marriage is defined by cotton. It sounds simple, almost…
Two decades together is no small feat. It is a milestone that speaks to patience,…
poems The Merchant of Venice Student Edition---PDF and Complete TextThe water in Venice is never…
There is a specific kind of silence that settles in the garden after a loss.…
There is a specific kind of magic that happens when a photographer doesn't just capture…
In the ancient Italian town of Santarcangelo di Romagna, where history clings to the cobblestones…
The Princeton Club of New York, usually a bastion of quiet networking, recently became the…
A decade together is no small feat. It’s ten years of inside jokes, shared silences,…
In the vast and fragmented linguistic landscape of China, the spoken word has always been…
In an art world often preoccupied with jarring intellectualism or the pursuit of hyper-realistic technicality,…
For Joseph Scheier-Dolberg, the Oscar Tang and Agnes Hsu-Tang Associate Curator of Chinese Paintings at…
I still remember watching you when Grandma passed away. I saw how deeply you mourned,…
There is a distinct difference between seeing a moment with your eyes and seeing how…
Clothing has never been merely about protection against the cold. Across five millennia of human…
The first year of marriage is often a whirlwind of emotions. It is a period…
Ralph Waldo Emerson once observed that "Earth laughs in flowers," a poetic sentiment that reverberates…
There is a specific gravity to a poem carried in the pocket. It is different…
Mother’s Day is approaching, and if you are miles away from the woman who raised…
Winter has a way of changing the landscape of our lives, not just the view…
The allure of Japanese art often lies in its masterful negotiation between the void and…
There is a distinct fairy-tale quality to the work of Lison de Caunes, a resonance…
William Wordsworth (1770–1850) remains a titan of English letters, a figure whose life spanned the…
I was thinking today about how much ground we've covered together. You know, between two…
There is a paradoxical nature to porcelain. In its raw state, it is dense earth;…
The sonnet is not merely a form; it is a vessel for concentrated thought. To…
The intersection of heritage craftsmanship and avant-garde installation art often yields the most compelling dialogues…
I've been thinking a lot about the power of visibility lately, especially as we celebrate…