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poemBy Rosalie Moffett
The sun was losing a long gold tooth on the linoleum of the labor and delivery ward.
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poemBy Isabella Desendi
readying it for my lover’s dinner, I remembered my abuela slashing the rooster’s throat. I was four.
i(’ll) sprout any how
(flourish!)
Recent Features from Poetry
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Prose from Poetry MagazineBy Cyrus Cassells
Besides being eloquent and courageous, Melvin was a vivacious man—one of the most alive people I’ve ever known—and had a wonderful blend of cosmopolitan erudition, blazing humor, and down-home wisdom....
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Educational resources on poetic forms curated by Poetry Foundation staff
From the Poetry Magazine Archive
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poemBy David ShapiroThe trees have sex,Teach,Focus.Tohu BohuChaos in a green light.Alone again.How alone I twistat the end of thoughtwhen illness is forgotand the speakeris punched on the barkon the soft models.The old abbot looked at us and laughed.He loved electronic gadgets for...
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poemBy Lucie ThéséeHandsome, like those foam-topped tidal waves breaking high, in little crystal globes.Handsome, like the breeze that lifts a little tuft of tulle. If tulle were life.Handsome, like a frozen face, tear-tracked, when the sun hammers down.Handsome. Like fire.Handsome, like the...
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Founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912, Poetry is the oldest monthly devoted to verse in the English-speaking world. More History