Vox Populi

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

Julia B. Levine: Driving South on I-5 in Spring

How every vanishing enters me
like a bomb not yet tripped, but ready to go.
Most of all, I want to believe I can keep you alive.

June 2, 2025 · 21 Comments

Baron Wormser: Thought Nothing

The Separatists, as the religious settlers of New England were denominated, saw themselves as people similar to the Israelites in the Bible, people who were in a covenant with the Lord and who faced an enemy who stood in the way of occupying destined land.

June 1, 2025 · 8 Comments

Terry Blackhawk: A Springfield Ghazal

My grandfather “witnessed a lynching” my father recalled,
but “expressed no shame” about what he’d seen in Springfield.
“Only a boy,” my mother maintained, when my father
began to tell about his father that night in Springfield.

June 1, 2025 · 9 Comments

Michael Simms: Five Pieces of Advice to Writers Who Want to Publish

Since I’ve been an editor and publisher for a long time, I’m often asked to advise first-time authors on how they can get their work into the world.  

May 31, 2025 · 25 Comments

Meg Pokrass: Enlightened Adventures of Mark Zuckerberg 

“Say, is that a dorsal fin in your pocket, or are you happy to see me?” she blurts, all seaweed hair, bioluminescent lipstick, wiggling like a stuck jellyfish— illuminating unseen caves of Mark Zuckerberg’s shipwrecked heart.

May 31, 2025 · 6 Comments

William Trowbridge: Breakdown

The foreman led me into a cavernous room that took up most of the ground floor, where three huge machines unspooled 16-ton rolls of tin plate into sheets to be turned into cans. The machines resembled aircraft carriers, with ladders to the control towers.

May 30, 2025 · 4 Comments

Robert Frost: A Servant to Servants

My father’s brother wasn’t right. They kept him
Locked up for years back there at the old farm.
I’ve been away once – yes, I’ve been away.
The State Asylum.

May 30, 2025 · 11 Comments

Marianne Dhenin: Voters Demand a Bolder and More Progressive Democratic Party

Around the U.S., progressive candidates are preparing to run for office and push for a liberal opposition that lives up to its ideals.

May 29, 2025 · 6 Comments

Stuart Dischell: Pleasure Harvest

Nights were difficult when her absence curled beside him,
A long-legged question no longer to be answered.

May 29, 2025 · 8 Comments

James Zogby: Why Does the US Press Ignore the Trauma Experienced by Palestinians in Gaza? Racism

Because we don’t see Palestinians as fully human, we fail to understand how destroying their lives, denying them a normal present and a hopeful future can result in deformities in their sense of self.

May 28, 2025 · 8 Comments

Mary Jane White: Rain, In Riverview Cemetery, Martins Ferry, Ohio

The rain
Already hangs a grey shawl in front of the blue domes of the Ohio
Greek Orthodox church, standing cheek by jowl by an industrial dairy.

May 28, 2025 · 9 Comments

Abby Zimet: A Sea Of Sorrow | Mindless Cruelty Remains the Point

Still held in a Louisiana detention center for the crime of denouncing the slaughter and starvation of Gazan children, Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil told a judge Thursday his deportation would likely mean death for him and his family.

May 27, 2025 · 5 Comments

Adam Patric Miller: Two Poems

there’s a train approaching
always a train approaching
lights burning blue and red in the dark

May 27, 2025 · 9 Comments

Valerie Bacharach: Venice

My husband and I sit in Piazza San Marco, sip overpriced coffee
in morning sun, and at home my friend loses pieces
of herself each hour

May 26, 2025 · 17 Comments

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