FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE OF

Poetry Magazine

p1
Explore Past Issues
quoteRight
That’s what poetry is: a wind, a leaf of grass that ties time and space
together.
quoteLeft
— Wang Ping
Poem

poetry-magazineBeach

By Stanley Plumly
Poem

poetry-magazineThe Call

By Ellen June Wright
quoteRight
I’m almost always lying
In a
poem
quoteLeft
— Dorothea Lasky
quoteRight
After tonight, what’s left of you is you moving into my
dream
quoteLeft
— Zhang Xian, tr. by Shangyang Fang
quoteRight
Once I learned I could have the last word
I couldn’t stop having
it.
quoteLeft
— Brittany Cavallaro
Multiple people reading Poetry magazine, each framed in colorful arched shapes. Red and black text reads. "Special Offer. 5 months of Poetry for $15"

Recent Features from Poetry

  • Hard feelings 8 dark blue

    Prose from Poetry Magazine

    By Will Harris

    What other kind of writer puts so much stock in the quasi-religious notion of a calling or a vocation? 

  • Hard feelings 9 grey green

    Prose from Poetry Magazine

    By Elaine Kahn

    My writing was not more important to me than my wish to have a family. And this is the well from which much of my shame flowed.

Hard feelings 9 grey green

Prose from Poetry Magazine

By Elaine Kahn

My writing was not more important to me than my wish to have a family. And this is the well from which much of my shame flowed.

Prose from Poetry Magazine

By Will Harris

What other kind of writer puts so much stock in the quasi-religious notion of a calling or a vocation? 

From the Poetry Magazine Archive

  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    A DeafBlind Poet

    By John Lee Clark
    A Deaf Blind poet doesn’t like to read sitting up. A Deaf Blind poet likes to read Braille magazines on the john. A Deaf Blind poet is in the habit of composing nineteenth-century letters and pressing Alt+S. A Deaf Blind poet is a terrible...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    A Future History

    By Suzi F. Garcia
    A muster of peacocks show off their tails, but instead of feathers, knives. And smoke where their voices should be. I breathe gray until it fills my throat, choking on tulle. On the loudspeaker, a mutation of a voiceover, a...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Echo

    By Raymond Antrobus
                                          1

    My ear amps whistle like they are singing
    to Echo, goddess of noise,
    the raveled knot of tongues,
    of blaring birds, consonant crumbs
    of dull doorbells, sounds swamped
    in my misty hearing aid tubes.
    Gaudí believed in holy sound
    and built a cathedral to contain it,
    pulling...

Submissions

Find out how to submit your poetry.

Submit

Newsletter

Sign up for the Poetry Foundation newsletter.

Sign Up

History

Poetry was founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912.

More History