A Five-Beat History of Poetry

From Sappho to slam

By Google Arts & Culture

Autumn Moon over Ishiyama (1830-1844) by Utagawa Hiroshige (Japanese, 1797-1858)Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields

For as long as language has existed, people have got creative with it. Almost any expressive language with a rhythm can be thought of as poetry. From early chants, songs, and epic narratives, to contemporary visual and performance poetry, here's a five-beat history.

Earth observations taken by the Expedition 12 crew (2005-11-15)NASA

1. Prehistoric poetry

The hunting songs of African communities and the court-poems of civilizations in the Nile, Volta, and Niger river valleys are considered some of the earliest origins of poetry, according to historians like Ruth Finnegan.

Amphora likely depicting Sappho (-0450)British Museum

Ancient Sumerian priests probably used early forms of poetry in their hymns. The erotic verse of Sappho, the Greek poet from the island of Lesvos, survives from around 600 BCE.

The Flood Tablet, relating part of the Epic of Gilgamesh (-699/-600)British Museum

This carving, known as the Deluge Stone, is from around 2000 BCE, and relates the epic poem of Gilgamesh, a Mesopotamian hero.

Homeric Bust

2. Epics

From Gilgamesh to the Epic of Sundiata to Beowulf to Homer and beyond, long stories of wars, journeys, and other heroic endeavours have formed the stuff of poetry for millennia.

Inferno Canto III (1939/1939) by Amos NattiniCollezione Fondazione Cariparma

Italian poet Dante Alighieri even imagined a fiery descent into the Inferno of hell, a climb up the mountain of Purgatory, then bliss in Paradise. He settled some old scores along the way, placing some of his political enemies in the deep circles of the underworld.

Above the Clouds I (1962-1963) by Georgia O'KeeffeGeorgia O'Keeffe Museum

3. Lyrics

I wandered lonely as a cloud...
Many people were taught about Wordsworth, Keats, Byron and Shelley (the Romantic Poets) at school, but the tradition of 'lyric' poetry - short poems with expressive and often romantic subjects - goes back way further.

Queen's Lyre (-2600/-2600)British Museum

The word 'lyric' comes from the stringed instrument which accompanied early Greek verse, the 'lyre'. This one's 3000 years old! Lyric poems are what most people think of when they hear the word 'poetry', and include everything from Shakespeare's sonnets to Sanskrit hymns.

Fiona Shaw in The Waste Land (1997-12) by Graham BrandonOriginal Source: V&A

4. Modern developments

From 1900 onwards, poets in many languages began experimenting with abstract forms and innovative language, responding to a more mechanized modern world and the new wonders (and horrors) that came along with it.

Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and Gregory Corso (1957)Sound and Music

From T.S. Eliot's 1922 The Waste Land up to the Beat Poets of 1950s and 60s America, poetry responded to modernity by seeing how far language could be pushed and distorted to communicate new experiences.

Spoken Word Poet Ngoma @ The Inspired Word's NYC Open Mic Joint - Nuyorican Poets Café (2011 - 2015) by NgomaaNuyorican Poets Cafe

5. Slam!

Poetry began as a spoken medium, and, today, Slam Poetry is an international phenomenon, bringing the oral, rhythmic traditions back to the fore with a punch.

Visual Poetry in Europe (2015) by Visual Poetry in EuropeImago Mundi

But poetry on the page thrives, too, with small independent presses to suit any taste, as well as a rich global practice of 'visual poetry' which draws on traditions dating back to ancient China. Today you can read, see, hear, and make poetry anywhere, with anyone.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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