Though the term 'concrete poetry' is modern, the idea of using letter arrangements to enhance the meaning of a poem is old. Such shaped poetry was popular in Greek
Alexandria during the 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE, although only the handful which were collected together in the
Greek Anthology now survive. Examples include poems by
Simmias of Rhodes in the shape of an egg, wings and a hatchet, as well as
Theocritus' pan-pipes. The post-Classical revival of shaped poetry seems to begin with the
Gerechtigkeitsspirale (spiral of justice), a
relief carving of a poem at the pilgrimage church of
St. Valentin, Kiedrich. The text is carved in the form of a
spiral on the front of one of the church
pews and created in 1510 by master carpenter
Erhart Falckener. But the heyday of the revival of shaped poetry came in the
Baroque period when poets, in the words of
Jeremy Adler, "did away with the more-or-less arbitrary appearance of the text, turned the incidental fact of writing into an essential facet of composition, and thereby…created a union of poetry with the visual arts". There were already precedents for this in
Micrography, a technique for creating visual images used by Hebrew artists, which involves organizing small arrangements of Biblical texts such that they form images which illustrate the subject of the text. Micrography allowed the creation of images of natural objects by Jews without directly breaking the prohibition of creating "graven images" that might be interpreted as
idolatry. The technique is now used by both religious and secular artists and is similar to the use of Arabic texts in
Islamic calligraphy. 's "Easter Wings" (1633), printed sideways on facing pages so that the lines would call to mind angels flying with outstretched wings Early religious examples of shaped poems in English include "
Easter Wings" and "
The Altar" in
George Herbert's
The Temple (1633) and
Robert Herrick's "This crosstree here", which is set in the shape of a cross, from his
Noble Numbers (1647). Secular examples include poems on the subject of drinking in the shape of wine flagons by
Rabelais and
Charles-François Panard (1750), supplemented by the elaborate goblet of
Quirinus Moscherosch (1660), the playful "A Toast" (Zdravljica, 1844) by
France Prešeren, with stanzas in the shape of wine-glasses, and "
The Mouse's Tale", a shaped poem published in 1865 by
Lewis Carroll. The approach reappeared at the start of the 20th century, initially in the
Calligrammes (1918) of
Guillaume Apollinaire, with poems in the shape of a necktie, a fountain, and raindrops running down a window, among other examples. In that era also there were typographical experiments by members of avant-garde movements such as
Futurism,
Dada, and
Surrealism in which layout moved from an auxiliary expression of meaning to artistic primacy. Thus the significance of the
sound poetry in Marinetti's
Zang Tumb Tumb (1912) is expressed through pictorial means. Similarly in Germany,
Raoul Hausmann claimed that the typographic style of his "Phonemes" allowed the reader to recognize what sound was intended. In Russia the Futurist poet
Vasily Kamensky went so far as to term the typography of his
Tango with Cows, published in 1914, "ferro-concrete poems" (
zhelezobetonnye poemy), long before the name became current elsewhere. A further move away from overt meaning occurred where "poems" were simplified to a simple arrangement of the letters of the alphabet.
Louis Aragon, for example, exhibited the sequence from A to Z and titled it "Suicide" (1926), while
Kurt Schwitters' "ZA (elementary)" has the alphabet in reverse, and the Catalan writer Josep Maria Junoy (1885–1955) placed just the letters Z and A at the top and bottom of the page under the title "Ars Poetica". ==Post-war concrete poetry==