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light verse

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light verse, poetry on trivial or playful themes that is written primarily to amuse and entertain and that often involves the use of nonsense and wordplay. Frequently distinguished by considerable technical competence, wit, sophistication, and elegance, light poetry constitutes a considerable body of verse in all Western languages.

The Greeks were among the first to practice light verse, examples of which may be found in the Greek Anthology. Such Roman poets as Catullus, singing of his love’s sparrow, and Horace, inviting friends to share his wine, set patterns in light poetry that were followed to the end of the 19th century.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) only confirmed photograph of Emily Dickinson. 1978 scan of a Daguerreotype. ca. 1847; in the Amherst College Archives. American poet. See Notes:
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Medieval light verse, mainly narrative in form, was often satirical, bawdy, and irreverent but nonetheless sensible and essentially moral, as can be seen in the 12th-century Latin songs of the goliards, the often indecent French fabliaux, and mock-epics, such as the Roman de Renart.

French light poetry of the 14th and 15th centuries was written largely in ballades and rondeaux, challenging such poets as Clément Marot and Pierre de Ronsard to great displays of virtuosity. A vein of light melancholy runs through the witty verse of many English Renaissance poets, from Sir Thomas Wyatt to Richard Lovelace. The more cheerful poetry of Ben Jonson and Robert Herrick sometimes celebrated food and simple pleasures.

Late 17th-century examples of light verse include Samuel Butler’s Hudibras (1663), which satirized the English Puritans, and the Fables (1668, 1678–79, 1692–94) of Jean de La Fontaine, which create a comprehensive picture of society and minutely scrutinize its behaviour.

The great English light poem of the 18th century is Alexander Pope’s The Rape of the Lock (1712–14), a mock-epic in which the polite society of his day is shown by innuendo to be a mere shadow of the heroic days of old. Lord Byron’s verse novel Don Juan (1819–24), sardonic and casual, combined the colloquialism of medieval light verse with a sophistication that inspired a number of imitations.

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Light verse proliferated in the later 19th century with the rise of humorous periodicals. Among the best-known light works of the period are the limericks of Edward Lear’s Book of Nonsense (1846), W.S. Gilbert’s Bab Ballads (1869), and the inspired nonsense of Lewis Carroll’s Hunting of the Snark (1876). The American poet Charles G. Leland exploited the humorous possibilities of immigrant jargon in The Breitmann Ballads (first published under that title in 1871).

In the 20th century the distinction between light and serious verse was obscured by the flippant, irreverent tone used by many modern poets, the nonsense verse of the Dadaists, Futurists, and Surrealists, and the primitivistic techniques of such writers as the Beat poets and E.E. Cummings. In spite of their seeming lightness, the works of such poets as Vladimir Mayakovsky, W.H. Auden, Louis MacNiece, Theodore Roethke, and Kenneth Fearing are usually seriously intended; they may begin by being amusing but often end in terror or bitterness. Though light verse in the traditional manner was occasionally produced by major poets—for example, Ezra Pound’s delightful Middle English parody “Ancient Music” (“Winter is icummen in”) and T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats (1939)—it has come to be associated with exclusive or frequent practitioners of the genre: in the United States, Ogden Nash, Dorothy Parker, Phyllis McGinley, and Morris Bishop; in England, Sir John Betjeman and Hilaire Belloc; and in Germany, Christian Morgenstern and Erich Kästner.

The term is a general one that can be applied to nonsense verse, limerick, clerihew, epigram, and mock-epic.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.