agendaangle-downangle-leftangleRightarrow-downarrowRightbarscalendarcaret-downcartchildrenhighlightlearningResourceslistmapMarkeropenBookp1pinpoetry-magazineprintquoteLeftquoteRightslideshowtagAudiotagVideoteenstrash-o
Skip to Content

Poems

Begin in delight, end in wisdom.

Explore Poems

Featured Poems

    • Poem of the Day
      By Lucia Perillo
      The old woman in the parking lot
      wields her walker not unspryly. Gray hair
      lank and without style, hanging
      under her ski hat, as I wear a ski hat—
      her legs bare under her skirt,
      my legs bare under my skirt,
      she wears sneakers, I wear...

    • Audio
      From Audio Poem of the Day August 2024

      By Adam Wolfond

    • poem
      By Robert Frost
      Nature’s first green is gold,
      Her hardest hue to hold.
      Her early leaf’s a flower;
      But only so an hour.
      Then leaf subsides to leaf.
      So Eden sank to grief,
      So dawn goes down to day.
      Nothing gold can stay.
       

Featured This Month

Poem Guides

Schools and Movements

From the Poetry Magazine Archive

    • poem

      Appeared in Poetry Magazine Fourth of July, 2012

      By Robyn Schiff
      I remember a performance
      of Antigone in which she
      threw herself on the floor of
      the universe and picked up
      a piece of dust. Is that
      the particle? It startled me.
      Was it Scripted? Directed?
      Driven? I am a girl, Antigone.
      I have a sister. We love
      each other...

    • poem

      Appeared in Poetry Magazine Catalogue Army

      By Naomi Shihab Nye
      Something has happened to my name.
      It now appears on catalogues
      for towels and hiking equipment,
      dresses spun in India,
      hand-colored prints of parrots and their eggs.

    • poem

      Appeared in Poetry Magazine The Fifth of July, 2020

      By Patricia Spears Jones
      _work like miasma_             fount of boundless energy
      un lifted                 the weekly cross carrying
                candles out
      more tomorrow

About the Archive