Deeply affecting, classic, and accessible.
There has been a lot of discussion about poetry since the breakout success of Rupi Kaur’s Milk and Honey: Are these “Instagram poets” killing the artform entirely, or ensuring its survival in the 21st century? Whichever side of the debate you fall on, we can probably all agree that poetry is important, and certainly something worth keeping alive.
But you don’t have to rely solely on the Rupis of the world to find poems that are beautiful and accessible—in fact, you can turn to many of the greats, from the melancholic Anne Sexton to the always-snarky Dorothy Parker. In honor of National Poetry Month, we’ve listed ten collections by classic poets that any reader can enjoy and connect with. Check them out below!
Revolutionary Petunias, Alice Walker
Our Favorite: “The QPP”
“The quietly pacifist peaceful
always die
to make room for men
who shout.”
The Complete Poems, Anne Sexton
Poem: “Her Kind”
I have gone out, a possessed witch,
haunting the black air, braver at night;
dreaming evil, I have done my hitch
over the plain houses, light by light:
lonely thing, twelve-fingered, out of mind.
A woman like that is not a woman, quite.
I have been her kind.
A Wave, John Ashbery
Poem: “More Pleasant Adventures”
A sentimental journey—“gonna take a sentimental journey,”
And we do, but you wake up under the table of a dream:
You are that dream, and it is the seventh layer of you.
We haven’t moved an inch, and everything has changed.
Love Alone, Paul Monette
Our Favorite: “HERE”
everything extraneous has burned away
this is how burning feels in the fall
of the final year not like leaves in a blue
October but as if the skin were a paper lantern
full of trapped moths beating their fired wings
and yet I can lie on this hill just above you
a foot beside where I will lie myself
soon soon and for all the wrack and blubber
feel still how we were warriors when the
merest morning sun in the garden was a
kingdom after Room 1010
Monster, Robin Morgan
Our Favorite: “Monster”
Sweet revolution, how I wish the female tears
rolling silently down my face this second were each a bullet,
each word I write, each character on my typewriter bullets
to kill whatever it is in men that builds this empire,
colonized my very body,
then named the colony Monster.
Scattered Poems, Jack Kerouac
Our Favorite: “PAX”
I demand that the human race
ceases multiplying its kind
and bow out
I advise it.
The Concrete River, Luis J. Rodríguez
Our Favorite: “The Concrete River”
This river, this concrete river,
Becomes a steaming, bubbling
Snake of water, pouring over
Nightmares of wakefulness;
Pouring out a rush of birds;
A flow of clear liquid
On a cloudless day.
Not like the black oil stains we lie in,
Not like the factory air engulfing us;
Not this plastic death in a can.
Becoming Light, Erica Jong
Our Favorite: “Lullaby for a Dybbuk”
Pain
is not love.
Love flowers; love gives
without taking;
love is serene
and calm.
The Moon is Always Female, Marge Piercy
From “The Moon is Always Female”
The moon is always female and so
am I although often in this vale
of razorblades I have wished I could
put on and take off my sex like a dress
and why not? Do men always wear their sex
always?
The Portable Dorothy Parker, Dorothy Parker
Our Favorite: “A Certain Lady”
Oh, I can smile for you, and tilt my head,
And drink your rushing words with eager lips,
And paint my mouth for you a fragrant red,
And trace your brows with tutored finger-tips.
When you rehearse your list of loves to me,
Oh, I can laugh and marvel, rapturous-eyed.
And you laugh back, nor can you ever see
The thousand little deaths my heart has died.
And you believe, so well I know my part,
That I am gay as morning, light as snow,
And all the straining things within my heart
You’ll never know.