I second that, though not in an attempt to cause any offence. The vast majority of her work is too controversial to be affecting in its context; she has the wrong approach to evaluating the concept of love in Rapture and I fail to see why The World's Wife is very poetic. And most importantly, some of her more 'suggestive' work isn't always something you want to read.
Luckily, I have avoided having to study her poetry for AS. Ideally, they would set Alexander Pope/Robert Browning/Samuel Taylor Coleridge.