"Tea and Tattered Pages" brings a little bit of magic and delight into our lives by offering a variety of activities centered around poetry, such as:

  • Out loud poetry readings, either yours or someone else's
  • Talks on genres or schools of poetry by subject matter experts
  • Poetry writing workshops (including haiku) led by notable poets
  • Analyses and discussions of selected poems, such as "The Waste Land, "The Prelude," or "Howl."
  • Translation comparisons of selected poems
  • Paris metro poetry discussions
  • Analyses and discussion of "100 Poems Everyone Should Know" lists
  • Discussions about the lives of selected poets
  • Visits to the graves of poets in Paris cemeteries


And more . . . your imagination and desires are the limits!

The group normally meets on the 1st Saturday of each month from 13:30 - 16:30 pm.
If you would like more information or if you have questions, please email:

literature@wice-paris.org

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UPCOMING EVENTS

    • 21 Jun 2025
    • 1:30 PM - 4:30 PM
    • In person, to be shared after registration
    • 3
    Register

    The Poetry Playground: A Beginner's Journey (Part II)

     “A poet is, before anything else, a     person who is passionately in love with   language.”     W. H. Auden

    By popular demand from the initial attendees, we are offering a continuation of our 17 May poetry session.

    In the 21 June session, we will continue to discuss free verse and its wide-ranging influence and appeal and also explore prose poems, from their beginnings with Charles Baudelaire up through contemporary prose poems. We will have a writing exercise--possibly two-- based on the poems that we discuss.

    Course Description:

    If you’re passionate about, and fascinated by, words—from their deep meanings to their unique sounds to their typography on the page—but you've been intimidated by poetry, this three-hour workshop is for you.

    We will look at a variety of poems, ranging in dates from a seventeenth-century sonnet by William Shakespeare to Diane Seuss’ un-rhymed sonnets published in 2021. We will also study free verse and its rich and long history, with examples including Emily Dickinson, Guillaume Apollinaire, John Keats, Sylvia Plath, and William Carlos Williams. We’ll discuss fundamental elements of poetry including structure, style and tone, voice, theme, sound and imagery.

    Finally, we will use some of the poems as departure points for two prompts to get you writing.

    Join us for a passionate and in-depth introduction to poetry—what it is and how it is—and share inspirations both on and off the page.


    About the Instructor: 

    Heather Hartley’s poetry collections include Adult Swim and Knock Knock, both published by Carnegie Mellon University Press. She was Paris Editor for Tin House magazine for over fifteen years.

    Her short fiction, poems, essays and interviews have appeared in or on PBS Newshour, The Guardian, The Literary Review and other venues. She teaches creative writing at the University of Kent’s (UK) Paris School of Arts and Culture and has also taught at the American University of Paris and the University of Texas El Paso MFA program.

    www.heatherhartleyink.com