Oxford English Dictionary - poetry

Copyright Oxford University Press

poetry 'p<e>UItrI. Forms: 4-7 poetrie, 5 -trye, -terye, 6 Sc. poyetrie, 5- poetry.

Etymology: ME. = OFr. poetrie, poeterie (13-14th c.), old Ital. poetría (Florio); ad. late and med.L. poetria, f. poeta poet. [ Poetria occurs in a scholium on Horace Epist. ii. i. 103, written (according to O. Keller, Pseudacro) c 650, perh. in North Italy, and preserved in MSS. of 10th c.; also in 9th or 10th c. MSS. of Martianus Capella. It is used as the title of treatises on the art of poetry, esp. the Nova Poetria of Gaufrei de Vinsauf (Galfridus de Vino Salvo, also called Galfridus Anglicus) about or soon after 1200; and in various works of the 13th c., as the Græcismus of Eberhardus Bethuniensis c 1212 (`Arte poetria fungor dum fingo poema'), the translation of Averroes' paraphrase of Aristotle's Poetics by Hermannus Alemannus c 1260, and the Catholicon of Joannes de Janua, 1286 (`a poeta, poeticus, et hæc poetria ars poetica'). (I. Bywater.) The relation of the word to L. poetria, Gr. poihtria, poetess, is not clear; but, from its antiquity, its formative suffix cannot be identified with Fr. -erie, Eng. -ery, -ry, in such words as chirurgery, drollery, bigotry, mimicry. Our earliest English examples are from Chaucer, to whom the Nova Poetria of Galfridus was well known, as he makes the Nun's Priest refer to it in his Tale (l. 527) and apostrophize the author as `O Gaufred deere Maister souerayn'.]

I In obsolete senses.

1 A rendering of med.L. poetria in sense of an ars poetica or treatise on the art of poetry. Obs.

2 Applied to imaginative or creative literature in general; fable, fiction: cf. poet sb. 1 b. Obs.

II In existing use.

3 The art or work of the poet: a With special reference to its form: Composition in verse or metrical language, or in some equivalent patterned arrangement of language; usually also with choice of elevated words and figurative uses, and option of a syntactical order, differing more or less from those of ordinary speech or prose writing. [ In this sense, poetry in its simplest or lowest form has been identified with versification or verse: cf. quots. 1658, 1755. ]

b The product of this art as a form of literature; the writings of a poet or poets; poems collectively or generally; metrical work or composition; verse. (Opp. to prose.)

c With special reference to its function: The expression or embodiment of beautiful or elevated thought, imagination, or feeling, in language adapted to stir the imagination and emotions, both immediately and also through the harmonic suggestions latent in or implied by the words and connexions of words actually used, such language containing a rhythmical element and having usually a metrical form (as in sense 3 a); though the term is sometimes extended to include expression in non-metrical language having similar harmonic and emotional qualities (prose-poetry).

d Extended (with reference to the etymology) to creative or imaginative art in general. rare.

4 pl. Pieces of poetry; poems collectively. rare.

5 fig. Something resembling or compared to poetry; poetical quality, spirit, or feeling. Phr. poetry of the foot or of motion: dancing.

6 (With capital initial.) The name given to the sixth, or (reckoning the Preparatory as one, the seventh) class from the bottom or third from the top, in English Roman Catholic schools, seminaries, or colleges, on the continent, and subsequently in England. The class so called comes between Syntax and Rhetoric.

7 attrib. and Comb., as poetry professorship, reader, school, work-shop; poetry-loving adj.; poetry-book, a book containing a collection of poems, esp. one used in schools; poetry reading, the reading of poetry, esp. to an audience; a poetry recital; poetry recital, a public performance of poetry; poetry-voice, a pompous or mannered style of writing poetry or reading it aloud.

Hence 'poetryless a., devoid of poetry.