So here are all the poems I posted in the last couple of months. Again, they’re arranged alphabetically by author.

  1. My First Poem For You by Kim Addonizio
  2. You Don’t Know What Love Is by Kim Addonizio
  3. A Sad Child by Margaret Atwood
  4. Shapechangers in Winter by Margaret Atwood
  5. Variations on the Word Love by Margaret Atwood
  6. Variations on the Word Sleep by Margaret Atwood
  7. Cascando by Samuel Beckett
  8. One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
  9. Sonnet XIV by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  10. Sonnet XLIII by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  11. Seven Years Later, Driving Home by Justine U. Camacho
  12. Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll
  13. Disappear by Conchitina Cruz
  14. Morning by Conchitina Cruz
  15. Anyone Lived In a Pretty How Town by E.E. Cummings
  16. I Carry Your Heart With Me by E.E. Cummings
  17. L(a by E.E. Cummings
  18. Silently If, Out of Not Knowable by E.E. Cummings
  19. Since Feeling is First by E.E. Cummings
  20. Somewhere I Have Never Traveled by E.E. Cummings
  21. You Being in Love by E.E. Cummings
  22. The Hollow Men by T.S. Eliot
  23. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T.S. Eliot
  24. Dark Sonnet by Neil Gaiman
  25. The Day the Saucers Came by Neil Gaiman
  26. Arboretum by Louise Gluck
  27. The Untrustworthy Speaker by Louise Gluck
  28. 27 by Nerisa del Carmen Guevara
  29. Having it Out With Melancholy by Jane Kenyon
  30. A Letter to Claire Danes From a Fan in Manila by R. Zamora Linmark
  31. Slippery When English by R. Zamora Linmark
  32. The Muse This Time by R. Zamora Linmark
  33. Yours, Etcetera by Paolo Manalo
  34. Room by Rod McKuen
  35. The Need (Thirty-Six) by Rod McKuen
  36. Hyacinth by Edna St. Vincent Millay
  37. Very Like a Whale by Ogden Nash
  38. I Do Not Love You by Pablo Neruda
  39. I Like For You to Be Still by Pablo Neruda
  40. If You Forget Me by Pablo Neruda
  41. Tonight I Can Write by Pablo Neruda
  42. Elm by Sylvia Plath
  43. What a Thing is Made Of by Isabelita O. Reyes
  44. Till Death Do Us (Or The Uses of Cliches) by Isabelita O. Reyes
  45. Love Song by Rainer Maria Rilke
  46. The Eighth Elegy by Rainer Maria Rilke
  47. The Ninth Elegy by Rainer Maria Rilke
  48. The Second Elegy by Rainer Maria Rilke
  49. You Darkness by Rainer Maria Rilke
  50. You Who Never Arrived by Rainer Maria Rilke
  51. Briar Rose (Sleeping Beauty) by Anne Sexton
  52. Cinderella by Anne Sexton
  53. Lessons in Hunger by Anne Sexton
  54. Live by Anne Sexton
  55. For My Lover Returning to His Wife by Anne Sexton
  56. The Frog Prince by Anne Sexton
  57. Wanting to Die by Anne Sexton
  58. Sonnet CXVI by William Shakespeare
  59. Comes the Dawn by Virginia Shopstall (sometimes called After a While and credited to Veronica Shoffstall. Sorry, can’t seem to figure out which one’s the original.)
  60. Reclamation by Angelo Suarez
  61. Because I Don’t Know by May Swenson
  62. The Key to Everything by May Swenson
  63. Drinking Wine by Wislawa Szymborska
  64. Love at First Sight by Wislawa Szymborska
  65. Advice to a Girl by Sara Teasdale
  66. True Love by Judith Viorst
  67. Love After Love by Derek Walcott
  68. Dance Russe by William Carlos Williams
  69. This is Just to Say by William Carlos Williams
  70. Knives by Jane Yolen

Also, because I wasn’t able to reply their comments immediately and I know it seems rude but I honestly just didn’t know what to say but anyway, to Issy Reyes and Paolo Manalo: Thank you for visiting and thank you for your poetry.



2 Responses to “70 Favorite Poems: A Recap”  

  1. If you’re interested in more poetry, you might be interested in this LiveJournal. Thank you.

  2. 2 Katrina

    I just happened to stumble upon this, and I just wanted to say thank you for sharing this. I look for poems on the net a lot, but it’s usually hard for me to find ones I particularly like. Thank you for sharing 70 of your personal favourites, I’m randomly selecting ones to read and I’m about halfway through your collection, ahaha. Thank you again, this was a really good idea, I’m really really enjoying these. Wonderful post (:


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