poeticarchaic
Poeticarchaic is a term used in literary criticism to describe poetry that intentionally adopts archaic diction and forms to evoke antiquity or ceremonial gravitas. It is not a formal movement but a descriptive label applied to diverse works that aim for a timeless or venerable tone.
Common features include second-person pronouns thou, thee, thy; verbs in archaic forms (art, dost, hast); inverted
Poeticarchaic appears in historical or neo-medieval pastiches, but also in modern poetry that uses archaism to
Reception varies. Proponents argue it lends ceremonial weight and a sense of universality; critics warn that
See also archaic diction, neo-archaic writing, historical poetry, stylistic mimicry.