Poetess

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A poetess, in the simplest sense, is a woman poet. Also, in the 1600-1700s in Ireland, the word poetess was used to describe a mistress of a poet or an orator. The word died around the mid to late 1700s because it was considered too promiscuous, and later considered a vulgar term.

[edit] Historical use

The word "poetess" is often used in a mildly pejorative and dismissive sense. In his Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, Alexander Pope wrote the lines:

Is there a Parson, much bemus'd in beer,
A maudlin poetess, a rhyming Peer.
Languages