Laurence Binyon’s poem was first published by The Times in 1914 and is seven stanzas long, with usually just the fourth now being repeated. The words have come to symbolise all casualties of war.
Video: 'You're looking at the gift wrap and not the jewel inside': 92-year-old shares moving poem on aging that will bring even the hardest of hearts to tears 92-year-old Wanda B. Goines is ...
After: Poetry Destroys Silence” is a documentary that argues that poets are as crucial to processing unthinkable tragedy as historians. The film’s look and sound are lyrical, providing an apt setting ...
“I wanted to, like, write a poem about me getting on a two-wheel bike for the first time when I was six years old. And so from that I started adding more things,” said the fifth grade ...
The old crowd knew their place. Don’t say a word. Quick now. The table’s free. Good evening, ladies. Do ignore us. Thank you. Sean O'Brien's most recent collection of poems, Embark ...