Not so great a list there to argue the point. Tennyson? Are you serious? He died in the 19th Century. Yeats wrote most of his stuff before 1930. Of course, one person brought up Bukowski and Angelou, but then everyone else made a point to say they were both awful. It is true that there are some relatively recent poets in your list, but that doesn't change the fact that the GENERAL conversation concerned whether one should read so-called Canonical poets in order to write. The exceptions do not make the rule.
This reminds me of another discussion I had on this forum with one of these self-assured "experts" on the topic of Fitzgerald. This person demanded to know who Fitzgerald had influenced, and I said Charles Bock, who had just written a literary novel that had gone mainstream and was sort of the talk of the town. The person who had asked the question started to make fun of Bock because this person had never heard of him, as though that were the primary mechanism to determine the value of a writer.
What I thought odd then and now was that both that person and many others in the thread seem entirely disconnected from modern literature and modern writers simply because it's easier to look cultured or smart by sticking to the Canon. I think it's an abortion of taste to merely inherit the tastes of the establishment--not to mention liking the Canon uniformly so that one need never actually think about what one really likes. It's much easier to quote Pope and tell people to read Shakespeare--neither of which are all that helpful if the topic is modern poetry.
I did not know, and still, I find it hard to believe that you missed the person listing the names and finest attributes of those he agreed with. And this was followed up immediately by another declaring that the original poster's name should be added to the fine list of respectable personages. Then another.... It's just typical herd behavior. "We're on the same team. I like you; let's stick together!"



I did that with a professor once.

