Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 11971
Do you think of poetry as lofty, rhyming, rhythmic paeans to important people, or as picturesque chronicles of nature? How about your normal life? Learn how poetic that just might be!
William Carlos Williams was an unconventional twentieth-century American poet.
Although he wrote poetry and prose, he was a practicing family doctor in Rutherford, New Jersey, for forty years.
As a member of the middle class, Williams wrote about suburban life and captured the language of the patients with whom he interacted. Although Williams's parents had wanted Williams to pursue a stable career in medicine, Williams was drawn to the creative energy of poetry as a teenager.
He was frustrated over the lack of recognition his poetry received throughout much of his life; however, he worked with influential poets in the early twentieth century, such as H.D. and Ezra Pound. He became a mentor to mid-twentieth-century poets, including Allen Ginsburg, until his death on March 4, 1963.
As you read this biography on William Carlos Williams, answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper.
When you have finished answering the questions, check them against the ones provided below.
Move on to the Got It? section to read several of Williams's poems.