Poems of Hope and Resilience
The words of others can help to lift us up.

How can we find hope amid uncertainty, conflict, or loss? When we feel we have lost hope, we may find inspiration in the words and deeds of others. In this selection of poems, hope takes many forms: an open road, an unturned page, a map to another world, an ark, an infant, a long-lost glove that returns to its owner. Using metaphors for hope seems appropriate, as the concept of hope is difficult to describe. It is deeper than simple optimism, and more mysterious, delicate, and elusive. It is a feeling we must develop and cultivate, but like faith, it is also a state with which we are graced. Hope can foster determination and grit—the ability to bounce back and to remain determined despite failures and setbacks—when we make daily efforts to change and improve what we can control. These poems speak to the importance of hope and resilience.
won’t you celebrate with me
Lucille Clifton
Still I Rise
Maya Angelou
A Center
Ha Jin
“Hope” is the thing with feathers
Emily Dickinson
Lift Every Voice and Sing
James Weldon Johnson
- Javier Zamora
From the magazine:
Second Attempt Crossing
Facing It
Yusef Komunyakaa
Psalm 150
Jericho Brown
Carrion Comfort
Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Roger Reeves
From the magazine:
Cymothoa Exigua
Try to Praise the Mutilated World
Adam Zagajewski
- Natalie Diaz
From the magazine:
It Was the Animals
- Yusef Komunyakaa
From the magazine:
The African Burial Ground
Saint Francis and the Sow
Galway Kinnell
- Jamaal May
From the magazine:
There Are Birds Here
- Marilyn Nelson
From the magazine:
from Miss Crandall's Boarding School for Young Ladies of Color
Interpretation of a Poem by Frost
Thylias Moss
Goodbye to Tolerance
Denise Levertov
To be of use
Marge Piercy
Enlightenment
Natasha Trethewey
Of History and Hope
Miller Williams
Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: “Cornel West makes the point...”
Claudia Rankine
Thanks
W. S. Merwin
At Last the New Arriving
Gabrielle Calvocoressi
A Plagued Journey
Maya Angelou
A Portrait of a Dog as an Older Guy
Katia Kapovich
Elegy
Mong-Lan
- Emanuel Carnevali
From the magazine:
Hope
Drawn Curtains
Edmond Jabès
A Map to the Next World
Joy Harjo
- Tiffany Higgins
From the magazine:
Dance, Dance, While the Hive Collapses
A Ritual to Read to Each Other
William E. Stafford
us
Tory Dent
- Susan Elizabeth Howe
From the magazine:
“Your Luck Is About To Change”
- János Pilinszky
From the magazine:
On the Wall of a KZ Lager
Song of the Open Road
Walt Whitman
Chronic
D. A. Powell
Yellow Glove
Naomi Shihab Nye
Threadsuns
Paul Celan
Self-Help
Charles Bernstein
- Stanley Moss
From the magazine:
Winter Flowers
A Litany for Survival
Audre Lorde
Pa' Césary Corky
Alurista
L.A. Prayer
Francisco X. Alarcón
An Old Story
Tracy K. Smith
Perhaps the World Ends Here
Joy Harjo
Enemies
Wendell Berry
All the Dead Boys Look Like Me
Christopher Soto
Biography of LeBron as Ohio
Sean Thomas Dougherty