Category

Ars Poetica

A poem that reflects on the art of poetry itself, discussing its purpose, methods, and nature.

Showing 1-20 of 44
  • Poem

    From the magazine:Ars Poetica: Ambulthiyal Abecedarian

    By Janiru Liyanage
    A pound of
    Bruised mangoes
    Cleaved into halves, chilied and salted like the heads of
    Dead fish, which…
  • Poem

    From the magazine:Ars Poetica with Invocation

    By Megan Denton
    Which way to the monster cage? I am in my god body now—

    in my sandy foxhole
    sat backwards in a chair…
  • Poem

    From the magazine:Ars Poetica 3

    By Joseph Millar
    Your friends tell you the writing
    is good but you’re not actually buying it—
    so much idle conversation…
  • Poem
    By H.D.
    He and I sought together,
    over the spattered table,
    rhymes and flowers,
    gifts for a name.

    He said, among others,
    I will bring
    (and the phrase was just and good,
    but not as good as mine,)
    "the narcissus that loves the rain."

    We strove for a name,
    while the light of...
  • Audio
    Audio Poem of the Day
    By Kimiko Hahn
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    Convergence

    By Kimiko Hahn
    Iambic lines drafted in silt
    are revised when glaciers melt
    so verses ending in heroic couplet
    are more epigram than sonnet.

    Revised when glaciers melt,
    continents submit to a warning.
    The land is more epigram than sonnet
    —no—more erasure than given form.

    As continents admit the warming,
    the coasts...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    Ars Poetica

    By Lisa Low
    After not showing in a poem how I once was boring, I spend weeks collecting proof  from my past for readers who wanted to know. I have difficulty deciding the best prop for my poem:

        A) from the outside,...
  • Poem
    By Vievee Francis
    I keep rifles in the front closet.
                     Trespassing can be a glance.

    A good shot,
                     I practice with bottles, bull's eyes.

    I cross the line where the fence...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    Ars Poetica

    By José Olivarez
    Migration is derived from the word “migrate,” which is a verb defined by Merriam-Webster as “to move from one country, place, or locality to another.” Plot twist: migration never ends. My parents moved from Jalisco, México to Chicago in 1987....
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    [Thirteen Implements]

    By W. S. Graham
    Do not allow me to sink, I said
    To a top floating ribbon of kelp.
    As I was lifted on each wave
    And made to slide into the vale
    I wanted not to drown. I wanted
    To make it all right with my dear,
    To tell...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    There’s a Limbo Moon Above

    By Beth Bachmann
    The best-known German goldsmith of the sixteenth century, Wenzel Jamnitzer, is also remembered for his study of the five platonic solids, Perspectives of Regular Bodies, in which he proposed that out of the same five bodies one can go on...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    Essay on Craft

    By Ocean Vuong
    Because the butterfly’s yellow wing
    flickering in black mud
    was a word
    stranded by its language.
    Because no one else
    was coming — & I ran
    out of reasons.
    So I gathered fistfuls
    of  ash, dark as ink,
    hammered them
    into marrow, into
    a skull thick
    enough to keep
    the gentle curse
    of  dreams. Yes, I...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    from Junk

    By Tommy Pico
    Wherever we go, needs feed and I find it harder and harder to
    believe benevolence is the thing Thousands of Yazidi girls

    missing and plastic fills the ocean’s mouth and the cursive of
    yr name still occupies the canopy of my throat Fuel,...
  • Poem
    By James Weldon Johnson
    Tiny bit of humanity,
    Blessed with your mother’s face,   
    And cursed with your father’s mind.

    I say cursed with your father’s mind,
    Because you can lie so long and so quietly on your back,   
    Playing with the dimpled big toe of your left foot,   
    And looking...
  • Poem
    By Elizabeth Alexander
    Poetry, I tell my students,
    is idiosyncratic. Poetry

    is where we are ourselves
    (though Sterling Brown said

    “Every ‘I’ is a dramatic ‘I’”),
    digging in the clam flats

    for the shell that snaps,
    emptying the proverbial pocketbook.

    Poetry is what you find
    in the dirt in the corner,

    overhear on...
  • Poem
    By Jane Kenyon
    I am the blossom pressed in a book,
    found again after two hundred years. . . .

    I am the maker, the lover, and the keeper....

    When the young girl who starves
    sits down to a table
    she will sit beside me. . . .

    I...
  • Poem

    From the magazine:

    Anecdote of the Jar

    By Wallace Stevens
    I placed a jar in Tennessee,   
    And round it was, upon a hill.   
    It made the slovenly wilderness   
    Surround that hill.

    The wilderness rose up to it,
    And sprawled around, no longer wild.   
    The jar was round upon the ground   
    And tall and of a port in...
  • Poem
    By Jody Gladding
                                                                      not self
     
    of                                                                                     violence
     
                                                           against                   will  not  be  gainsaid
                                                                                             will  brook  no  argument
                                                                                             won't  suffer  the  fools
     
                                                                                                                                     gladly
                       would   I   climb   a
                mountain         of       salt       with       you
     
    before  dawn                                      lodestar             my  freight                    the  violent

                silence                                            the  most  beautiful                       word

                                                                                      is

                                                                                     trespass
Newsletters

Sign up for Poetry Foundation newsletters

Sign Up