“Never More Will the Wind” by H.D.
"H.D. by the end of her career became not only the most gifted woman poet of our century, but one of the most original poets—the more I read her the more I… Read More
“Lightning Bugs” by Kevin Durkin
Kevin Durkin attended schools in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Germany before earning his degree in English literature from Princeton University. He has taught English in Singapore, Kitakyushu (Japan), New York City, and… Read More
“The Unsettled Motorcyclist’s Vision of his Death” by Thom Gunn
"What appeals to these two transatlantic groups of readers might be quite distant when seriously considered, but the quality in Gunn’s poetry that magnetized them both is an exquisite combination: English grace… Read More
“On The Beach” by Rick Mullin
Rick Mullin is the author of four volumes of poetry, including Sonnets from the Voyage of the Beagle, and Soutine, both published by Dos Madres Press, Loveland, OH. His work has appeared… Read More
“Variation on an Old Saying” by Christine Yurick
Christine Yurick’s poems have appeared in journals print and online and are forthcoming in American Arts Quarterly and 823 on High. She is the founding editor of Think Journal. She lives with… Read More
“Men Loved Wholly Beyond Wisdom” by Louise Bogan
"Beyond the Bogan poems is a woman, intense, proud, strong-willed...Her poems can be read and reread: they keep yielding new meanings, as all good poetry should." -- Theodore Roethke… Read More
“Dockery and Son” by Philip Larkin
"Larkin wrote in clipped, lucid stanzas, about the failures and remorse of age, about stunted lives and spoiled desires." -- J.D. McClatchy… Read More
“There Will Come Soft Rains” by Sara Teasdale
"Teasdale's enduring legacy will be her genius for the song, for the pure lyric in which words seem to have fallen in place without art or effort." --Louis Untermeyer… Read More
“Unidentified Flying Object” by Robert Hayden
"Hayden was a remembrancer, a poet of faith and superb execution, and one of the best teachers by example one can find in the poetry of the twentieth century, or in any… Read More
“Casus Belli” by R.S. Gwynn
“Gwynn juxtaposes styles and subjects not customarily seen together—mythic and modish images phrased in language alternatively sublime and debased—but told with such force of imagination and assured musicality that the resulting poems… Read More
“Party-Time! Excellent!” by Quincy R. Lehr
Quincy R. Lehr's most recent books are Heimat (2014) and The Dark Lord of the Tiki Bar (2015). He lives in Brooklyn, where he is the associate editor of The Raintown… Read More
“The Young Ones” by Elizabeth Jennings
"It is the business of poetry to restore thought to its dignity as a harmonious process, and so make it memorable, and that is what Elizabeth Jennings achieves."-- Peter Levi… Read More
“Fleshly Answers” by Rachel Hadas
Rachel Hadas has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship, two Ingram Merrill Foundation grants, the O.B. Hardison Award from the Folger Shakespeare Library, and an Award in Literature from the… Read More
“Meridian” by Ernest Hilbert
"Ernest Hilbert’s poems are beautifully made in their diction. The intelligence is clear." – Donald Hall… Read More
“Little Naomi: The Great Gatsby (Baz Luhrmann)” by Susan de Sola
Susan de Sola is an American poet living in Amsterdam. Her poems have appeared in The Hudson Review, The Hopkins Review, Ambit, River Styx, and many other venues. She holds a… Read More
“Human Interest” by Ernest Hilbert (with Audio)
Tough-minded and precise, Ernest Hilbert’s lyrics, like his old mirror left out at the curb, turn an unflinching gaze on pieces of inner and outer landscapes we often push to the periphery.… Read More
“An Excerpt from ‘American Letter'” by Archibald MacLeish
"Americans are the first self-constituted, self-declared, self-created people in the history of the world.” -- Archibald MacLeish… Read More
“The Courage of Poetry”: Alicia Stallings TED Talk
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live… Read More
“Kite” by Ernest Hilbert (with Audio)
"The comparisons to Lowell are just . . . What’s so attractive [in All of You on the Good Earth] is the colloquial nonchalance that transpires within the formal decorum. It’s quirkier,… Read More
“The Common Life” by W.H. Auden
“Auden is the most inclusive poet of the twentieth century, its most technically skilled, and its most truthful.” - Edward Mendelson… Read More
“Toddler Beneath a Jacaranda” by Kevin Durkin
Kevin Durkin attended schools in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Germany before earning his degree in English literature from Princeton University. He has taught English in Singapore, Kitakyushu (Japan), New York City, and… Read More
“The Gelding” by Ernest Hilbert (with Audio)
"Tough-minded and precise, Ernest Hilbert’s lyrics, like his old mirror left out at the curb, turn an unflinching gaze on pieces of inner and outer landscapes we often push to the periphery.… Read More
“Adam’s Curse” by William Butler Yeats
"One of the few [poets] whose history is the history of their own time, who are a part of the consciousness of an age which cannot be understood without them." --T.S. Eliot… Read More
“Dominion of the Parthians” by Ernest Hilbert
Ernest Hilbert received his doctorate in English Literature from Oxford University, where he edited the Oxford Quarterly and studied with Jon Stallworthy—biographer of Wilfred Owen and Louis MacNeice and editor of the… Read More
“Day in the Park” by Ernest Hilbert in the Best of the Asheville Poetry Review, 1994-2014 (with Audio!)
So nice to appear in such fine company, Borges and Boland, Niedecker and Oppen, Neruda and Patricia Smith, Gary Snyder and Alicia E Stallings, Billy Collins and Maryann Corbett, Michael Harper and… Read More
Excerpt from It’s Time by Frank Sherlock
Frank Sherlock is the Poet Laureate of the City of Philadelphia, and was a Pew Fellow in the Arts for 2013. His books include Over Here; The City Real and Imagined; and… Read More
“Meteor” by Susan Delaney Spear
Susan Spear is the managing editor of Think, a journal of formal poetry, book reviews, and criticism housed at Western Colorado State University. She has published poems in Academic Questions, The Lyric,… Read More
“Portrait of a Stranger in Mt. Moriah Cemetery” by Ernest Hilbert in the New Issue of the Battersea Review
The new issue of The Battersea Review is packed with all sorts of great things: Robert Archambeau reviews T.S. Eliot's Letters Vol. I; Saskia Hamilton reviews T.S. Eliot's Letters Vol. II;… Read More
“Letter to Virginia Woolf” by Terese Coe
Terese Coe's poems and translations have appeared in The Threepenny Review, Poetry, New American Writing, Ploughshares, Alaska Quarterly Review, The Cincinnati Review, The Huffington Post, Poetry Review, the TLS, Agenda, New Walk… Read More
“Mineral Point” by Ernest Hilbert in the New Issue of Yale Review
Like Yale’s schools of music, drama, and architecture, like its libraries and art galleries, The Yale Review has helped give the University its leading place in American education. In a land of… Read More