Greer has not recently endeared herself to women everywhere with her disdain for #metoo, but perhaps that is beside the point. This is an excellent anthology of poetry by women (or men pretending to write in women's voices) in the seventeenth century. Most of it will not seem terribly intimate or cuddly to those brought up on confessional verse and romantic notions of the self, but a bit of priming on Enlightenment sensibility and Augustan verse would probably smooth that right out. Almost all the material included is occasional, which was characteristic of the age, and _Rod_ was the first widely printed paperback book that made the work of Aphra Behn, Margaret Cavendish, Katherine Philips, and their peers available. When we write today, we don't necessarily have a set form or list of conventions that we follow, but no seventeenth-century poet of any stripe would have found this intelligible. That writing was considered very much a masculine province and privilege is important to know, and constantly served as obstacle to these wonderful poets, who overcame and achieved.