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Robert Penn WarrenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Bearded Oaks” by Robert Penn Warren (1937)
Robert Penn Warren wrote many love poems in addition to “True Love.” “Bearded Oaks” reflects Warren’s early style of strict rhyme and consistent meter. In this poem, the two lovers are together as though outside of time yet knowing time will eventually intrude.
“Old Flame” by Robert Penn Warren (1978)
“Old Flame” is similar to “True Love” in that the speaker as a boy admires an older girl. However, in adulthood, he returns and meets the object of his crush to find time has taken her allure. Though a poem of his later career, it follows a rhyme scheme, though its rhythm is irregular.
“Mortal Limit” by Robert Penn Warren (1985)
“Mortal Limit” is contained in the same collection as “True Love,” which was the last collection Warren produced in his lifetime. Though not a love poem, it nevertheless ponders how one can conceive of the boundless yet still exist in a world of limitations. Though a poem of his later career when Warren wrote mostly in free verse, this poem is composed as a sonnet.
“The Terrible Distance: Robert Penn Warren's (Unwritten Story) of Romantic Love” by Joe Sarnowski in Lamar Journal in the Humanities (2000)
Joe Sarnowski discusses several of Warren’s love poems including “True Love.” The article traces how the development of Warren’s poetry converses with reformulations of American gender politics through the 20th century.
“Robert Penn Warren, Audubon and Imagination” by Marshall Walker (1989)
In addition to short lyrics, Warren also produced some book-length poems, one of which is Audubon: A Vision (1969). The elements of the poem that Walker addresses also concern “True Love”: imagination, the passage of time, and the treatment of historical facts.
“Robert Penn Warren and the Poetic Afterlife” by Victor Strandberg (1998)
Strandberg is an astute reader of Warren and has published a large amount of criticism on him. This article gives a good general overview of Warren’s work.
Veteran voice actor David J. Bauman, who records under the name Tom O’Bedlam, reads Robert Penn Warren's poem “True Love.”
By Robert Penn Warren