Vox Populi

A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 20,000 daily subscribers and over 9,000 archived posts.

Video: The Tunnel

Three refugees run the race of their lives from Calais to Dover through the Euro Tunnel, trying to beat the trains and overcome their terror in a bid to reach freedom and start new lives in the UK. Based on true accounts.

October 10, 2025 · Leave a comment

Cesare Pavese: Displaced People

Suppose tomorrow, bright and early, we took a trip
to my hills. We could stroll through the vineyards and, maybe,
meet with a couple of girls, dark brown, ripened by the sun,
we could start a conversation and sample some of their grapes.

October 10, 2025 · 6 Comments

Abby Zimet: Untethered to the Facts

Two months ago, the United States made the Human Rights Watch list for the first time; rights advocates cited a nation “sliding deeper into the quicksands of authoritarianism” with peaceful protests met with military force, critics treated as criminals, journalists targeted, and support slashed for civil society.

October 9, 2025 · 10 Comments

David Kirby: In Praise of Chaos

Picasso says, Inspiration exists but it
has to find us working. The more you work,
the more mistakes you make. If you make
enough of them, it’s considered your style.

October 9, 2025 · 24 Comments

Michael Simms: Baron Wormser (February 15, 1948 – October 7, 2025)

Although history will have the final word on who among us is read by future generations, I’ll put my money on Baron. His writing represents the best of the American spirit.

October 8, 2025 · 58 Comments

Laure-Anne Bosselaar: Ode to Sungolds

Sungolds, coughed my old neighbor, a bird
shat the seed.

October 8, 2025 · 38 Comments

Adam Patric Miller: A Chill in American Classrooms

I’m trying to be a good teacher, listening carefully to my students so I can make the ten-thousand micro-adjustments in what I’m presenting to them so they will feel how much I really want them to learn.

October 8, 2025 · 10 Comments

Carine Topal: The Terrible Years   

Our son sits on a yellow bench bloodied
in the square, waving to a soldier. It is to you he says goodbye.
Now we must pack our bag of bread, head to toe in soot,
ready to eat anything.

October 7, 2025 · 17 Comments

David Lauterstein: Lulav

I am a Jew. I am ashamed of those wanting to kill.
The people of Gaza shake their own bodies
in six directions, with nowhere to go,
their only harvest, soil.

October 7, 2025 · 9 Comments

Chard deNiord: Patience Is The Tinder

a silence in which you hear
in the midst of the noise all around you
a voice that speaks inside the ear
inside your ear that depends
on silence for writing it down

October 6, 2025 · 13 Comments

George Yancy: Trump’s Education Plan Seeks to Make Cruel Domination Into “Common Sense”

Control the curriculum and you control the range of ideas that people are exposed to. This is why schooling is inherently political.

October 6, 2025 · 7 Comments

Hayden Saunier: Augury, 2025 

Seven black starlings
settle in the sycamore’s bony crown
like an idea taking shape
or a sign we once knew how to read.

October 6, 2025 · 22 Comments

Michael Simms: Serene Gorilla in a Cloud of Butterflies

Her name is Malui and she is walking through a cloud of butterflies she’s disturbed.

October 5, 2025 · 40 Comments

Baron Wormser: On a Sentence by Albert Camus

Sometimes, the illness of our world, the death-in-life that turns nature into nothing more than the source of raw material, seems so boundless that throwing the lasso of language on it seems impossible.

October 5, 2025 · 13 Comments

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