Facing It by Yusef Komunyakaa
http://youtu.be/IaeNQC7PWK4
Read by Michael Lythgoe for the Favorite Poem Project
“Methought I saw my late espoused Saint…” by John Milton
Sonnet 23 by John Milton
Recited by Ian Richardson, from the 1984 TV series “Six Centuries of Verse,” directed by Richard Mervyn
Triple Sonnet of the Plush Pony Part 3, by Anne Carson
Poem by Anne Carson, from Possessive Used as Drink (Me), a lecture on pronouns in the form of 15 sonnets
Video by Sadie Wilcox
See “Recipe” for more information on the production.
Cadáver by Daniel Iván
Poem and video by Daniel Iván
The Ruin (anonymous Anglo-Saxon)
Anonymous Anglo-Saxon poem
Film by Stuart Lee (including the reading and translation)
The anachronistic contrast between modern ruins and Anglo Saxon language and costume is extremely effective here. Kudos to Mr. Lee, and I hope more Anglo-Saxon poetry videos are in the offing.
Haiku by Ryôkan
Video illustration by erikdegroot88 of a haiku by Ryôkan Daigu
The Heat of Autumn by Jane Hirshfield
Poem by Jane Hirshfield (reading by Flora Coker)
Animation by Adam Deniston for the Poetry Foundation’s Poetry Everywhere series
The Aftermath of Magic by K. R. Copeland
http://www.vimeo.com/3697438
A video collaboration between K. R. Copeland (poem) and Donna Kuhn (video). The text may be read here.
Umeed-e-Sahar (Hope of the Dawn) by Faiz Ahmed Faiz
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8gJcwh4k88
Poem by the great Faiz Ahmed Faiz.
Music and video by Laal.
Love the interplay between the text of the poem and the drama in the video. The Wikipedia article linked above says that Laal are
known for singing socialist political songs, especially those written by leftist Urdu poets such as Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Habib Jalib and Ahmed Faraz. The band received mainstream attention during the Lawyers’ Movement, in which it led support to the reinstatement of the then deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad. […] Laal has not only managed to reconnect the people of Pakistan to the forgotten revolutionary socialist poets, but also introduced them to the youth
—which should serve as a reminder that, in some cultures, poetry still retains considerable power.
Angkor Wat by Remy Mansfield
Video and poem by Remy Mansfield