A black-and-white image of a dark mass lifting up a ghostly body.
Essay
By Ed Simon

Joshua Bennett's prophetic We (the People of the United States) is an American pastoral fully aware that our relationship to the land has been more tragic than idyllic. 

Poem

From the magazine:We

By Joshua Bennett
The money of  the mind is attention, maybe.
Which is not, initially, where I thought I’d begin,
but we…
Poem
By Brenda Shaughnessy
I forgot how lush and electrified
it was with you. The shaggy
fragrant zaps continually passing
back…
Poem

From the magazine:Without Numbers

By Ahmad Almallah
Human history lags behind all its zeros.
Palestinians are extra numbers, and this gray
cloud of summer…
Poem

From the magazine:Apocrypha

By Rae Armantrout
Dead satellite speaks.

Person with unique
blood type discovered....

Poem of the day

This is the terminal: the light
Gives perfect vision, false and hard;
The metal glitters, deep and bright...
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15 P Fweb Horizonal

FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE OF

Poetry magazine

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Quote:

I have started from happiness again.

. Unquote.
— jason b. crawford
Poem

From the magazine:Bella Notte

By Gilad Jaffe
Poem

From the magazine:play cousins

By Nicole Adabunu
Quote:

All that repeats—
let it be sweet? 

. Unquote.
— Tracy K. Smith
Poem

From the magazine:God of Song

By Tracy K. Smith
Poem

From the magazine:From Below

By Carl Phillips
Quote:

The truth is we come back as a choir.

. Unquote.
— Linda Gregg
Quote:

In time I have come to comprehend this: that you believe in the world by touching its every face.

. Unquote.
— Rick Barot
Poem

From the magazine:The Egg and the Stone

By Sylvie Kandé
Translated By Nancy Naomi Carlson
Poem

From the magazine:Say Word?

By CM Burroughs

The Poetry Foundation transforms lives through the power of words. Our work aims to amplify poetry and celebrate poets by fostering spaces for all to create, experience, and share poetry.


Featured Poets

Black and white headshot of writer Jan Beatty in front of a crosswalk.

Jan Beatty

Jan Beatty’s eighth book is Dragstripping (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024). Beatty has worked as a waitress, an abortion counselor, and in maximum security prisons.

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Poem

From the magazine:

Asylum

By Jan Beatty
15 P Fweb Small Horiz

5 Chances to Fall in Love with Poetry

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