If you’re writing a literary analysis about a poem, or just writing an essay and decide that you want to write about a poem, you will find that quoting a poem is not quite the same as quoting a sentence from an article. We have gathered everything you need to know about how to cite a poem.
Poems are often published as part of a collection of poems, either a book or a literary journal or magazine. As such, citing a poem is pretty similar to citing an article. It should appear like this in your Works Cited page: Plath, Sylvia. “Ariel.” Ariel, Harper & Row Publishers, 1966, pp. 26-27. Note the following:
However, if the poem appears in an anthology, it should be cited like this: Shakespeare, William. “Young Love.” The Book of Elizabethan Verse, edited by William Stanley Braithwaite, Herbert B. Turner & Co., 1907. Note the following:
Nowadays, there are websites dedicated to publishing poetry. You may cite them like this:Angelou, Maya. “Phenomenal Woman” from Still, I Rise, Random House, 1978, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48985/phenomenal-woman. Accessed 9 June 2018.
Need help with your term paper or essay?
HIRE A WRITER IN JUST A FEW CLICKS
Citing a poem and quoting a poem often goes hand-in-hand. So, now that you know how to cite a poem, let’s proceed to quoting a poem. If you will mention the poem in the essay followed by your own commentary or thoughts, the title should still be enclosed in quotation marks: In Sylvia Plath’s “Ariel,”… “Ariel” is one of Plath’s most popular poems. But if you will quote a part of the poem:
Maya Angelou opens “Phenomenal Woman” with the line “Pretty women wonder where my secret lies.” Through this ...
Angelou shows the narrator’s confidence by repeating the lines “Phenomenal woman / That’s me.” Angelou shows the narrator’s confidence by repeating the lines “I’m a woman / Phenomenally. // Phenomenal woman / That’s me.”
Note:
As with essays, if you are going to cite more than four lines of poetry, it will become a block quote: I say, It’s the fire in my eyes, And the flash of my teeth, The swing in my waist, And the joy in my feet. I’m a woman Phenomenally. Note the following:
If you are going to omit a word or a part of a line in your quote, use an ellipsis. However, if you will omit an entire line or more, use periods to the length of a line: Now you understand Just why my head’s not bowed. ………………………………………… When you see me passing, It ought to make you proud. There are many ways of how to cite a poem, but as you can see, there is a pattern. Keep these in mind (or in your browser’s bookmarks!) to make writing a literary analysis easier. For more on MLA formatting, go here and here. Should you need further assistance, don’t hesitate to ask us.
Quality Work
Unlimited Revisions
Affordable Pricing
24/7 Support
Fast Delivery