Valentine's Day allows you to express love through thoughtful gestures, gifts, and activities. This article offers 20 carefully curated romantic poems that can elevate your celebration ...
Valentine’s Day is a kind of proof, I guess, of how we all covet that kind of closeness. (I’d have chosen & Forgive Us Our Trespasses, by Sinead Morrissey, a perfect and devastating poem ...
For many of us, the run-up to Valentine’s Day is spent seeking out the least ... why not share one of these poems, which attempt to express the wonder and complexities of romantic love.
St. Valentine's Day took on a new meaning thanks to English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, who documented it as a day of romance in his 1375 poem Parliament of Fowls, writing, “For this was sent on ...
The Image Bank RF/Getty One lucky teacher got a unique — but hard-to-come-by — Valentine's Day gift from a student: a carton of one-dozen eggs. In a post shared to Reddit, the teacher wrote ...
The history of Valentine's Day is mushy. It's been linked to a 12th-century poem about birds mating, the Christian-martyr-turned-Saint Valentine and a deadly fertility ritual in ancient Rome ...
The official social media accounts for The White House shared a Valentine's Day poem featuring President Donald Trump on February 14, 2025. The post also featured the President's border czar ...
poems, and traditions surrounding the celebration of affection. Valentine’s Day is a blend of historical significance and modern celebration, rooted in the themes of love. We come a long way ...
The shift toward an association with romantic love emerged in the Middle Ages, and is often attributed to the poet Geoffrey Chaucer, who linked Valentine’s Day to romance in his poem Parliament ...
To commemorate King Richard II's engagement on that day in 1381, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote a love poem. “He had Italian friends who told him that it was the feast of St. Valentine, the first bishop ...
So, here we mention 20 best Valentine's Day poems for your partner to make them feel special. 1. Sonnet 18 by Shakespeare Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more ...