Beyond the Verse

PoemAnalysis.com

Welcome to “Beyond the Verse,” the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com. Embark on a literary journey where we explore specific poems, delve into poets, and uncover the intricate world of poetry. Each episode is dedicated to learning about the art and craft of poetry.Join us as we answer questions from Poetry+ users, provide insightful analyses, and discuss all things poetry. Whether you’re a seasoned poetry lover or a curious newcomer, “Beyond the Verse” promises to enrich your understanding and appreciation of the poetic world.Subscribe now to “Beyond the Verse” and immerse yourself in the beauty of verse, the stories behind the stanzas, and the wisdom of poets across ages. Join Poetry+ at PoemAnalysis.com to get the ultimate poetry experience, including asking questions on the podcast, PDF Guides on all things poetry, email newsletter, and many features on PoemAnalysis.com.

  1. HACE 9 H

    The Poetry of Ireland: Landscapes, Histories and Mythologies

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe turn their attention to the poetry of Ireland, exploring how history, landscape, and myth shape its voice. They begin with a wide historical lens, tracing key moments that influence Irish poetry, from early cultural identity to colonization, Cromwell’s legacy, and the Great Famine. The hosts show how these events are not just background, but deeply tied to how Irish writers understand identity and memory. They also reflect on how geography and mythology remain central to how Ireland is imagined in literature. This foundation helps listeners see why Irish poetry often feels both personal and political. The discussion then turns to Eavan Boland’s ‘Quarantine’ and W. B. Yeats’s ‘The Lake Isle of Innisfree’ and ‘Easter, 1916’. Maiya and Joe explore how Boland presents human suffering without romanticizing it, focusing on the quiet weight of history on individual lives. In contrast, Yeats moves between a desire for peace and a deep engagement with national identity and change. The hosts consider how these poems show different ways of responding to Ireland’s past. They also explore Patrick Kavanagh’s ‘On Raglan Road’ and Seamus Heaney’s ‘Bogland’, where personal experience meets cultural memory. The hosts reflect on how Kavanagh uses love and loss to express a sense of longing shaped by the past. With Heaney, they focus on the land itself, showing how the bog becomes a way of holding and revealing history. It reinforces the idea that the past is never fully separate from the present. The episode closes with Michael Longley’s ‘Ceasefire’ and Jessica Traynor’s ‘The Artane Band’, bringing the conversation into more recent history. Maiya and Joe discuss how Longley approaches conflict through quiet moments of human connection, while Traynor reflects on hidden histories and the need to confront them. They end by considering what connects all these poets, pointing to a shared effort to hold onto the past while still moving forward. Irish poetry, as they show, is constantly being reshaped by both memory and change. Discover more about Irish poetry and explore thousands of analyzed poems on PoemAnalysis.com. Send us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    1 h 15 min
  2. 26 MAR

    The Poetic Singularity of Emily Dickinson

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe return to Emily Dickinson to explore more of her work beyond ‘Because I could not stop for Death’. They focus on what makes her poetry feel so personal, original, and lasting. They begin with a brief look at Dickinson’s life in Amherst, her private nature, and how writing outside public attention shaped the intimacy of her voice. The hosts reflect on how her poems were not originally written for publication, which gives them a direct and unfiltered quality. This context helps explain why her work feels so close and personal to readers. The discussion then turns to ‘Hope is the Thing with Feathers’, where Maiya and Joe explore its central metaphor and emotional core. They consider how Dickinson presents hope as something steady that remains even in difficult moments. The poem also opens up ideas about imagination and emotional truth. They move next to ‘I’m Nobody! Who are you?’, focusing on Dickinson’s humor and her rejection of public identity. The hosts connect this to modern ideas of fame, attention, and the pressure to be seen. They also reflect on how the poem celebrates anonymity rather than success. Finally, in ‘I have never seen volcanoes’, they look at how Dickinson uses imagined landscapes to express inner emotion. The poem becomes a way of thinking about control, hidden intensity, and restraint. It also shows how her imagination can build powerful worlds without direct experience. The episode closes with a reflection on Dickinson’s style, her unique voice, and how her work continues to feel relevant today. Maiya and Joe emphasize how her poetry remains open to new readings. They leave listeners with a deeper appreciation of her lasting influence. Discover more about Emily Dickinson’s work and find thousands of analyzed poems on PoemAnalysis.com. Send us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    52 min
  3. 19 MAR

    Making a Poet Laureate: Simon Armitage

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe focus on the role of the Poet Laureate, using Simon Armitage’s career and poetry to consider what it means for one writer to speak to and for a nation. They begin with a brief history of the UK Poet Laureateship, tracing its shift from a role tied closely to royal praise into one that engages with public life, national feeling, and major cultural moments. Along the way, they reflect on key figures such as John Dryden, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and Carol Ann Duffy, and how the position has evolved over time. The discussion then turns to what a poet laureate represents today. Maiya and Joe explore the tension between poetry as an art form that challenges authority and the laureateship as a state-appointed role. They consider whether it should be seen as a prize, a vocation, or something in between, and what the selection process reveals about the literary world. The episode also looks closely at Simon Armitage’s background, from his upbringing in West Yorkshire to his early career and eventual appointment in 2019. The hosts reflect on how his work, public presence, and connection to both tradition and modern media have shaped his role. The first poem discussed is ‘Zoom’, where Maiya and Joe explore how Armitage moves from a familiar, local setting into something much larger, using everyday space to think about scale and human experience. They then turn to ‘Floral Tribute’, written after the death of Queen Elizabeth II, and consider how Armitage handles national mourning with restraint and a more personal tone, rather than relying on grand, formal language. The episode closes with a reflection on the future of the Poet Laureate role, asking how it might continue to change in a diverse and evolving society, and what kind of voice can represent a nation today. Featured Poets PDFs: Simon ArmitageAlfred Lord TennysonCarol Ann DuffySend us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    59 min
  4. 12 MAR

    Imagism in America with William Carlos Williams (Imagist Mini-Series)

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe bring their three-part exploration of the Imagist poets to a close with a discussion of the distinctive voice of William Carlos Williams. Beginning with Williams’s life and background, the hosts explore how his experience differed from many of the other Imagist poets. While figures like Ezra Pound and Hilda Doolittle were closely connected to European literary circles, Williams remained firmly rooted in the United States. They consider how this American perspective shaped his poetic philosophy, especially his commitment to simplicity, everyday language, and the belief that poetry should emerge from ordinary life rather than classical tradition. The conversation begins with Williams’s famously brief poem ‘The Red Wheelbarrow’. Maiya and Joe unpack how a poem of only sixteen words can carry surprising depth. They discuss the importance of line breaks, the power of visual structure on the page, and the quiet mystery created by the opening line “so much depends.” The hosts reflect on how Williams’s focus on simple objects, colors, and stillness captures the Imagist aim of presenting a clear image while leaving interpretation open to the reader. From there, the episode turns to ‘This Is Just to Say’, perhaps one of Williams’s most recognizable poems. What appears to be a simple apology note about eating someone else’s plums becomes, in the hosts’ discussion, a meditation on everyday life, temptation, and intimacy. Maiya and Joe explore the playful tone of the poem, its subtle emotional honesty, and the way Williams transforms an ordinary domestic moment into something quietly meaningful. The final poem of the episode, ‘The Young Housewife’, introduces a different perspective on Williams’s work. Here the hosts consider questions of observation, perception, and gender. They discuss how the speaker’s passing glance at the woman outside her home raises deeper questions about power, freedom, and the way lives can be shaped by how others imagine them. The episode concludes with a reflection on the legacy of Imagism itself. Maiya and Joe look back at the poets featured across the series and consider how the movement reshaped modern poetry through its emphasis on clarity, precision, and free verse. Even though Imagism lasted only a short time, its influence continues to shape the way poetry is written and read today. Featured Poets PDFs: William Carlos Williams Ezra Pound Hilda Doolittle (H.D.)Send us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    36 min
  5. 5 MAR

    Defining a Movement with Hilda Dolittle (Imagist Mini-Series)

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe kick off episode two of their Imagist mini series by turning to Hilda Doolittle, better known as H.D., and asking what made her one of the movement’s most important voices. They begin with H.D.’s life, from Pennsylvania to London, and the close, complicated circle that shaped early Imagism, including Ezra Pound, Richard Aldington, and William Carlos Williams. The conversation also looks at how the First World War hit her life directly, and how grief, rupture, and survival sit behind the sharp, pared down style Imagism is known for. From there, Maiya and Joe dig into three key poems. With ‘Oread’, they talk about how the title matters, how Greek myth frames the speaker, and how the poem’s commanding verbs turn nature into something forceful and almost violent. In ‘Sea Rose’, they focus on how H.D. takes a symbol usually linked to romance and softness and makes it rough, battered, and still somehow valuable, raising questions about femininity, endurance, and what it means to keep going in the wrong conditions. The episode closes with ‘Helen’, where H.D. rewrites a famous figure through the language of blame, silence, and public hatred, and asks what happens when a woman becomes a story people keep projecting onto. For more insights into H.D. and the Imagist movement, visit PoemAnalysis.com, where you can explore a wide range of analyzed poems, with thousands of PDFs, study tools, and more. Send us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    42 min
  6. 19 FEB

    Founding a Movement with Ezra Pound (Imagist Mini-Series)

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe kick off a new mini series on the Imagist poets with the movement’s key figure, Ezra Pound. Starting with Pound’s life and context, they introduce him as a major modernist force who helped shape early twentieth century literature, while also acknowledging the controversies that follow his political views and public persona. The hosts then break down the Imagist movement itself, tracing how it formed through writers gathering to debate and build something new, and how Pound helped define its direction through essays like “A Few Don’ts by an Imagiste” and “A Retrospect.” Maiya and Joe lay out the three guiding principles of Imagism, treating the subject directly, cutting any unnecessary words, and writing with the flow of a musical phrase rather than strict meter. They place these ideas inside the larger shift toward modernism, linking the movement to rapid urban change, new technology, shifting moral frameworks, and the growing influence of non-Western art and poetry, especially Japanese forms. The discussion then turns to close readings of three short Pound poems. They begin with ‘In a Station of the Metro’, unpacking how Pound compresses a crowded city moment into two lines, and how his ruthless editing becomes part of the poem’s meaning. They move to ‘L’Art, 1910’, where color, poison, and texture open up a debate about decay, perception, and whether the poem is inviting beauty or exposing what is broken. Finally, they explore ‘The Encounter’, focusing on how Pound writes desire and tension through observation and suggestion, leaving key details deliberately uncertain. By the end, the episode shows how Imagism is not “simple” poetry, but carefully built poetry, shaped by a world that felt unstable, fast, and new, and by writers who wanted language to do less talking and more seeing. For more on Ezra Pound, Imagism, and modernist poetry, visit PoemAnalysis.com, where you can explore a wide range of analyzed poems, with thousands of PDFs, study tools, and more. Send us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    40 min
  7. 12 FEB

    The Complete Anatomy of a Love Poem

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe celebrate Valentine’s Day with a sweeping journey through love poetry across more than two thousand years. Beginning with Sappho’s ‘Hymn to Aphrodite,’ Joe traces the devotional roots of romantic verse, where love is bound up with gods, ritual, and longing. From there, the hosts move through Robert Burns’s ‘A Red, Red Rose,’ exploring how symbols like the red rose and vows that last “till the seas gang dry” helped shape the language of romance we still use today. Emily Dickinson’s ‘Why Do I Love You, Sir?’ introduces a quieter, more instinctive love, rooted in nature and inevitability rather than spectacle. W. B. Yeats’s ‘When You Are Old’ follows, shifting the focus from youthful beauty to spiritual connection and the endurance of feeling beyond time. Maiya and Joe reflect on how Yeats reimagines devotion, asking what remains when appearance fades. The conversation then turns to Pablo Neruda, whose ‘Sonnet 17’ rejects traditional romantic clichés in favor of intimacy and shadow, while ‘Sonnet 11’ burns with hunger and urgency. Federico García Lorca’s ‘Gacela of Unforeseen Love’ brings a darker intensity, confronting desire, repression, and the pain of love that cannot be freely lived. Finally, John Cooper Clarke’s ‘I Wanna Be Yours’ offers a playful, modern twist, turning domestic objects into declarations of devotion and reminding listeners that love can live in everyday acts. Maiya and Joe close by reflecting on what unites these poems. Across centuries, styles, and cultures, love poetry remains a form of devotion—sometimes sacred, sometimes comic, sometimes aching, but always human. Featured Poets PDFs:  SapphoRobert Burns Emily DickinsonW. B. Yeats Pablo Neruda Federico García Lorca John Cooper ClarSend us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    1 h 21 min
  8. 23/10/2025

    Answering Community Questions with Joe & Maiya

    In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe close Season Three with a special Q&A from their listeners. After nearly forty episodes, they pause to look back on their journey, answer community questions, and talk about what’s next for the show. The first question comes from Chandra, asking if a fourth season is coming and whether they’ll take on an epic like the ‘Ramayana’. Joe and Maiya share their excitement about exploring epics and how such poems might need a multi-episode format, similar to their World War I series. They also reflect on favorite moments from the season. Joe mentions the ode episode and their discussion of Langston Hughes, while Maiya recalls how ‘Our Casuarina Tree’ by Toru Dutt and ‘The Man with the Saxophone’ by Ai expanded her research and deepened her love for discovering new poets. A question from the community sparks a thoughtful discussion on modern poetry. Joe talks about diversity, access, and the dominance of free verse, while Maiya considers how social media has both opened and complicated poetry’s world. They agree that poetry remains powerful because it connects people, comforts them, and helps them understand life’s most complex moments. Things take a playful turn with a quick-fire poet quiz. From Shakespeare to Heaney, Joe is forced to make impossible choices, ending with Seamus Heaney as his final pick. As they wrap up the season, the hosts thank listeners from more than 195 countries and invite everyone to keep sharing ideas on the PoemAnalysis.com community. With Season Four already in the works, they promise more poems, more voices, and the same thoughtful conversation that’s made the show a global favorite. Featured Mentions (PDF Guides for each): Toru DuttAi Langston HughesSeamus HeaneyPatrick KavanaghOcean VuongLouise GlückSend us Fan Mail Support the show As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

    31 min

Información

Welcome to “Beyond the Verse,” the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com. Embark on a literary journey where we explore specific poems, delve into poets, and uncover the intricate world of poetry. Each episode is dedicated to learning about the art and craft of poetry.Join us as we answer questions from Poetry+ users, provide insightful analyses, and discuss all things poetry. Whether you’re a seasoned poetry lover or a curious newcomer, “Beyond the Verse” promises to enrich your understanding and appreciation of the poetic world.Subscribe now to “Beyond the Verse” and immerse yourself in the beauty of verse, the stories behind the stanzas, and the wisdom of poets across ages. Join Poetry+ at PoemAnalysis.com to get the ultimate poetry experience, including asking questions on the podcast, PDF Guides on all things poetry, email newsletter, and many features on PoemAnalysis.com.

Quizá también te guste