Hypertext poetry

Hypertext poetry is a form of digital poetry that uses links using hypertext mark-up. It is a very visual form, and is related to hypertext fiction and visual arts. The links mean that a hypertext poem has no set order, the poem moving or being generated in response to the links that the reader/user chooses. It can either involve set words, phrases, lines, etc. that are presented in variable order but sit on the page much as traditional poetry does, or it can contain parts of the poem that move and / or mutate. It is usually found online, though CD-ROM and diskette versions exist. The earliest examples date to no later than the mid 1980s.

Hypertext in traditional poetry
Other contemporary programmers have incorporated hypertext into traditional poetry, which entirely changes the experience of reading these poems.

Many poems from the 18th century and before contain words and ideas unfamiliar to the contemporary reader, Greek and Latin words, Classical references, words that have changed in meaning or pronunciation, and the like. The modernist poetry of the 20th, with its wealth of allusion, is if anything more difficult to decode. Previously a reader would have to guess at many of these, and miss others; today, however, all such allusions can be hyperlinked, and the reader discovers and learns them simply by clicking the links.

For an example of hypertext incorporated into a modernist poerm, read Canto XCIII by Ezra Pound]].

It is arguable whether adding hypertext links to a poem results in a new artistic creation. At least, though, it undeniably makes the underlying art more acccessible.