Kyle Grimes
Influential Lyrics
A podcast that introduces some of the finest lyric poems in the English language. Focusing on form and sound, Influential Lyrics helps listeners actually hear and appreciate the wisdom and artistry of the language.
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Episodes
William Wordsworth's "I wandered lonely as a cloud" 09.06.2026 18:54
In the previous episode of Influential Lyrics , we considered a famous sonnet in which Wordsworth laments what he sees as a growing alienation from the natural world as people are increasingly caught up in a materialist culture of "getting and spending." That poem, you may recall, concludes with the speaker longing for a more profound and reciprocal relationship with nature, but it doesn't really...
William Wordsworth's "The world is too much with us" 13.05.2026 14:58
William Wordsworth (1770-1850), one of the central figures of British Romantic literature, is widely known as a nature poet. He is one of the first writers to develop a sophisticated exploration of the relationship between the natural world and the psychological, perhaps even spiritual flourishing of human beings. This poem in particular is one of Wordsworth's most widely known sonnets, but I've...
Charlotte Smith's "Written at the Close of Spring" 19.04.2026 16:11
This episode focuses on a sonnet by Charlotte Smith, one of the best (and certainly one of the most underrated) poets of the late 18th century. The podcast offers a reading of the poem, an explication, and some commentary on the meaning, value, and significance of the work--particularly in light of Smith's own biography, her status as a woman writer, her place in the "Literature of Sensibility,"...
Alexander Pope, from Essay on Criticism 02.04.2026 19:30
The present podcast is something of a deviation for Influential Lyrics . Rather than focusing on a single, short, self-contained lyric poem, I'll be focusing today on an excerpt from a longer work called Essay on Criticism , written and published in the early 18 th century by Alexander Pope. My reasoning for this swerve is simple enough: there is plenty to take issue with in Pope's philosophy of...
Anne Bradstreet's "By Night when Others Soundly Slept" 08.03.2026 14:32
This is a seemingly simple, uncomplicated, but intensely religious poem in which the speaker, while lying awake at night, is comforted by a visitation from her Saviour, presumably Jesus, and she rededicates herself to the service of her religion. The poem itself is easy enough to understand, though when seen in the context of Bradstreet's extraordinary biography, we can begin to see why she was su...
Richard Lovelace, "To Althea: from Prison" 19.10.2025 16:44
Richard Lovelace (1618-1657) is not quite so famous as some of the other poets featured here on Influential Lyrics , but his work offers some of the best examples of "Cavalier Poetry"--a mode of writing that came into prominence in the middle years of the 17th century. The Cavalier Poets (so named because of their loyalty to King Charles I) produced dozens of poems that celebrate aspects of the "g...
George Herbert, "The Collar" 19.10.2025 19:08
In 1633, one Nicholas Ferrars arranged for the publication of a book written by a close friend who had recently died. The book was called The Temple ; Ferrars' friend was a small-town pastor and poet—George Herbert—who has since become one of the most highly revered religious poets in the language. Herbert's "The Collar" is an extraordinary poem by this extraordinary poet. The poem expresses a fa...
John Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" 13.10.2025 17:53
John Donne's "Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" was probably written to his wife Ann in 1611 when Donne was preparing to travel to the Continent. The poem, however, is much more significant than this very specific occasion might suggest. It stands both as one of the most celebrated of English love poems and also as a clear example of Donne's quirky style as a "metaphysical poet." The present podc...
William Shakespeare, Sonnet #12 13.07.2025 17:32
The 1609 publication of Shakespeare's Sonnets raises several literary-historical questions, many of which remain unresolved, but what we do know is that most of the first 120-some sonnets appear to be addressed to a handsome young man (WH?) while the last 30 or so are about a person who has come to be known as the "Dark Ladie." And we know that the first 17 sonnets—often called the "Procreation S...
Sir Thomas Wyatt, "The Long Love that in my thought doth harbour..." 10.07.2025 13:50
This episode focuses on Sir Thomas Wyatt's early sonnet entitled "The Long Love that in My Thought Doth Harbour." By providing some background knowledge about the "courtly love" tradition and the "conceit" technique, the explication offers both a close reading of the sonnet and some useful context for understanding 16th-century poetry and poetics.
Sir Patrick Spens 19.06.2025 17:15
In 1765, Bishop Thomas Percy published his 3-volume Reliques of Ancient English Poetry. The book introduced a number of late medieval poems into the English literary canon, the most famous of which is the popular ballad called "Sir Patrick Spens." This episode includes a reading of the poem, a brief explication, and some commentary on the meaning, value, and significance of the work.
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