This anthology is a collection of poems published in five major eras including Elizabeth, Elizabethan, Metaphysics, Romanticism and the Victorian era. The previous Elizabethan era was the first old English, then the middle English. The Roman Empire used old English after the collapse of the 5th and 6th centuries. The invaders from Germany settled in the UK and are known as Angles, Saxon and Jutes. The names of these tribes derive from Anglo-Saxons.
Aristotle's poems describe three kinds of poetry: epic, comedy, and tragedy. Aristotle 's work had a great influence on Islamic Golden Age throughout the Middle Ages, then played a role in Europe during the Renaissance. Later on, Estheticians depicted poetry as three main types: epic, lyrical, and dramatically preserved the subcategories of tragedies and comedy. In the early modern Western tradition, the poet was more abstract and beautiful, but tried to distinguish poetry and prose by logical interpretation using prose in the form of a linear story.
Aristotle 's work affects the Islamic Golden Age and the Renaissance Europe all over the Middle East. Later poets and estheticians often distinguish poetry and poetry and defined it as opposed to prose. This is often understood as a sentence with a logical interpretation and a linear narrative structure. This does not mean that poetry is illogical or lacks a story, but poetry is a burden of trying to present beauty and loftiness without participating in the logic and narrative thinking process. British romantic poet John Keats called this evasive logic "negative ability". This "romantic" approach takes a form as an important element of a successful poetry, since the form is abstract and different from the basic conceptual logic. This method is still affecting the 20th century.