Poems

Explore a growing archive of the world’s greatest poems, from the classical to the modern age. Each poem is presented in its original text, paired with thoughtful analysis and historical context. Whether you’re rediscovering the familiar or reading a timeless voice for the first time, these works reveal how poetry captures what endures in language — feeling, memory, and the shape of thought.

The Solitary Reaper

A singer in a field teaches Wordsworth an ethics of listening — mystery honored, music carried inward as lasting solace.

London, 1802

An urgent apostrophe to Milton — Wordsworth critiques national selfishness and calls for humble, star-like virtue.

Bright Star

Keats reimagines constancy as intimacy — a star’s steadiness translated into breath and touch.

Ode to a Nightingale

Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale” captures the longing to escape mortality through the immortal voice of song.

Ode on a Grecian Urn

Keats’s urn contrasts life’s change with art’s permanence — desire held forever just before fulfillment.

To Autumn

“To Autumn” praises ripeness and labor, accepting time’s change with a serenity tuned to soft-dying light.

La Belle Dame sans Merci

A modern ballad of enthrallment and warning, “La Belle Dame sans Merci” leaves desire stranded where no birds sing.

To a Skylark

Shelley’s skylark, pure song in flight, teaches a difficult joy — art that consoles without denying human lack.