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Poetry Magazine

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Explore Past Issues
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The hoot of being alive. Name it
whatever you
like.
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— Steven Leyva
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When we go together, what is the simple form we
make?
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— Harryette Mullen
Poem
Laughter
By Rüştü Onur
Translated By Ulaş Özgün & Hüseyin Alhas
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You make the tender parts of me
sing.
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— Athena Nassar
Poem
Lacao
By Rosabetty Muñoz
Translated By Claudia Nuñez de Ibieta
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I did not know how beautiful we
are!
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— Mei-mei Berssenbrugge
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Recent Features from Poetry

  • Jayne Cortez stands in the middle of other Black artists and writers, posing for the photo. Some look at the camera and others at each other. There is a table with cups slightly visible in the foreground and cracked door in the background.

    Prose from Poetry Magazine

    By Sapphire

    For Cortez, poetry was not about mastery of form. Poetry in the mouth of the Firespitter was the creation of form.

  • Prose from Poetry Magazine

    By Hüseyin Alhas & Ulaş Özgün

    Onur’s verses are so intricately and sophisticatedly woven that their interpretation can yield entirely different meanings depending on the reader’s perspective. 

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Collection

110 Years of Poetry Magazine

By The Editors
An Anniversary Collection

From the Poetry Magazine Archive

  • Poem
    By Sherwin Bitsui
    On limbs of slanted light
    painted with my mind’s skin color,
    I step upon black braids,
    oil-drenched, worming
    from last month’s orphaned mouth.

    Winged with burning — 
    I ferry them
                    from my filmed eyes, wheezing.

    Scalp blood in my footprints — 
    my buckskin pouch...
  • Poem
    By Fatimah Asghar
    Today, I broke your solar system. Oops.
    My bad. Your graph said I was supposed
    to make a nice little loop around the sun.

    Naw.

    I chaos like a motherfucker. Ain’t no one can
    chart me. All the other planets, they think
    I’m annoying. They think...
  • Poem
    By Kevin Young
    Once hunger
    was my dance partner—

    Now my diamond shoes
    hurting my feet

    & that my wallet won't
    fit my 50s

    are my chief complaints.

    I'd like to thank
    God, my agent.

    My teeth went
    platinum last week.

    My ride's seats
    golden fleece.

    My greeting: Dog,
    Black, Homey,
    Money.

    Once every stranger
    was my father—

    I went out...

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History

Poetry was founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912.

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