Vox Populi

A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 6,000,000 visitors since 2014 and over 9,000 archived posts.

Jose Padua: These Years of Thinking Dangerously

When
the beautiful confusion of dreams becomes a stranger
to my waking hours I start to panic.

August 11, 2024 · 12 Comments

Christine Rhein: Attack of the Five-Foot-Four Woman 

In truth, only five foot three and a half,
and attack, too, a bit of a stretch

August 10, 2024 · 10 Comments

Toi Derricotte: My great teacher, Galway Kinnell, taught me: “Speak the unspeakable.”

My father taught me:
You have to break the bones
To get to the heart

August 9, 2024 · 12 Comments

Baruch November: A Gift in the Shallows of the Sea

One night, on Riis Beach,
years ago, I suddenly
proposed to your mother
in the moonlight

August 8, 2024 · 6 Comments

Barbara Hamby: Ode to Skimpy Clothes and August in the Deep South

A young woman is walking with her boyfriend, and it’s deep
summer in the South, like being in a sauna
but hotter and stickier

August 7, 2024 · 24 Comments

Pablo Otavalo: If you stood any closer you’d be underground

Help me dress these wounds with words

August 6, 2024 · 7 Comments

karla k. morton: The Next Generation

Not knowing the spring of 1980
would be the worst drought
in the history of Texas,
my father sod an entire acre.
It was my job to water.

August 5, 2024 · 5 Comments

Darnell Arnoult: Beneath Love & View From Space

Awful bucktoothed eyes flash
beneath Love’s crazy room. Round
and round, come again and again.
Believe in Death. Believe in Love.

August 4, 2024 · Leave a comment

Michael Simms: Two Summer Songs

I can’t help but be in love
with the blissful light of lemonade at noon
And gazpacho in the evening
a slice of lime hanging by its wound

August 3, 2024 · 37 Comments

Sadakichi Hartmann: Why I Love Thee?

Ask why the seawind wanders,
Why the shore is aflush with the tide,
Why the moon through heaven meanders
Like seafaring ships that ride

August 2, 2024 · 4 Comments

Barbara Huntington: Lost in Translation | Thoughts on Poetry After My Stroke

Then I became an erasure poem.

August 2, 2024 · 46 Comments

Tony Gloeggler: Thirteen

I want to book an early
morning flight, drive over
the hills, ride to the rescue
like John Wayne’s cavalry.

August 1, 2024 · 5 Comments

Sally Bliumis-Dunn: The Milkmaid

And what luxury of looking,
knowing that you won’t be seen
by the milkmaid,
gaze fixed upon her task,
her eyes downcast
beneath a crisp white cap

July 31, 2024 · 9 Comments

Jim Minick: Sighs

How they wallop with softness,
how they soothe with the slow rush
of wind through the forest in your dog’s nose,
each follicle a pine to sing a contented song

July 30, 2024 · 14 Comments

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