Home
>
Topics
>
Poetry

Top 25 Poetry Articles on Substack

Best Poetry Articles


Upcoming Poetry Events

Open mics, poetry slams, book launches, workshops, festivals and more!
This week’s newsletter features upcoming poetry events happening throughout Australia and online. Whether you’re looking to write, listen, or perform, there’s plenty to discover. Check out these open mics, poetry slams, book launches, workshops, festivals and more.
Uplift Poetry4 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Elizabeth Walton's avatar
Elizabeth Walton
And I’ll be at Mad Poet Newcastle NSW 7pm this Thursday 🏊🏽‍♀️

Poetry Prompts from The Monthly Poet

Turn four words into sixteen lines of poetry
Today we’re thrilled to collaborate with The Monthly Poet for our poetry writing prompts!
Monthly Poet7 LIKES6 RESTACKS
🌾👁's avatar
🌾👁
I sent in a poem! Thanks for the opportunity!
Monthly Poet's avatar
Monthly Poet
Thank you to Uplift Poetry for featuring Monthly Poet.
Each month Monthly Poet offers four words and an open invitation to write a 16-line poem. It doesn’t have to be perfect or even rhyme, and pen names are allowed. Every poem is published, and anyone can take part. You’re very welcome to write one this month.

Thanks, and can you help?

And a question about the story of a poem
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama218 LIKES9 RESTACKS
Casey Bottono's avatar
Casey Bottono
Hi Pádraig,
Thank you for sharing this poem, it's new to me.
My poetic treasure is the Rilke poem I've always known as Pushing Through, but I think it's actually called 'It's Possible'
'It's possible I am pushing through solid rock
In flint-like layers as the ore lies alone
I am such a long way in, I see no way through and no space.
Everything is close to my face, and everything close to my face is stone.
I don't have much knowledge yet in grief
So this massive darkness makes me small.
You be the master, make yourself fierce, break in.
Then your great transforming will happen to me, and my great grief cry will happen to you.'
I found it through a blog post by Elaine Mansfield, after watching her TED talk on what she learned from grief. I carried it with me for a year before I committed to memorising it.
It's a wonderful one to have on hand.
Casey
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello Pádraig and wonderful Poetry Unbound community! Happy Sunday!
I love how poems grow with us.
“You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I'll rise.”
I was a young girl when I found Maya Angelou's "Still I Rise," and those lines felt written for me, not someday me, but the me living through struggles I didn't yet have language for.
I'd grown up surrounded by voices: my adoptive mother's singer-songwriters (Paul Simon's “Sound of Silence”, Joni Mitchell's ache, Dylan's "Hurricane"), my father's jazz legends (Billie, Ella). Arlo Guthrie taught me music could move people to action. But I was searching for people who looked like me, searching for my identity. I found it, among others, in Alice Walker, in Maya Angelou; writers whose masterful language didn't just fire my imagination but reflected it back.
As a teenager, those four lines became my armor. Now, decades later, I love how poems morph with each year that passes another layer, how our focus shifts. The defiance is still there, but so is the lightness: like air, I'll rise. The music changes.

Courage and rage [re-sending; now open to all]

And the call to creativity
[Editor’s note: By mistake, when this post was sent, it was open only to paid subscribers. It is now open to all, and the Poetry Unbound Substack will continue to be readable by everyone. Apologies for the error.]
Pádraig Ó Tuama404 LIKES64 RESTACKS
Cheryl Clayton's avatar
Cheryl Clayton
"Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final."
This helps to remember to be open and that there is variability in feelings and I need not feel
stuck. Change comes.
Diane's avatar
Diane
Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror.
Just keep going.
This has been a mantra for several years. And living in Minneapolis these past few months a daily touchstone. There has been beauty and terror here and the directive to just keep going important when the daily onslaught triggered a freeze response.

It Has Saved My Life to Know This

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and writing prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors101 LIKES9 RESTACKS
Laura Coleman's avatar
Laura Coleman
A moving poem and prompt, thank you Ash. 🙏 Here is my offering:
It Has Saved My Life To Know…
I too have felt the fear of death, and
clung to life as though it was all I had.
I too have lived with great loss, and suffered
as one with a mind and heart does.
This changing body, this changing world,
it all happens too fast, or too slow, or maybe
just so.
Oh tender world, nothing remains the same,
trees fall and civilizations crumble, and
life will rise up again.
It has saved my life to know that each ending
leads to a beginning,
that death and life are not separate, but
part of the same thread, joined together,
as one cannot be without the other.
The way that light only shines
in the darkness.
Thảo Pixel Poet's avatar
Thảo Pixel Poet
It has saved my life to know this–
that the best therapy is free
that if you step out of your own head
out of people’s rampaging screams
out of the suffocating scrutiny and sexism
into
the
greenery
of a garden
or a local park
or, lucky you, a natural forest
you will soothe
finally.
You will hear the leaves rustle in the wind
tickles your brain
Your steps slowly start to sing
and you’ll realize–
just take one step at a time
just one minute at a time
just one by one
You’re safe.
And you will come through.
-
This poem stopped precisely at 100 words without planning. This was fun and very relatable. Thanks, Ash, for creating this poetry circle :)!

Belief and wonder

Wondering about belief
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama269 LIKES23 RESTACKS
Orna Ross 📚's avatar
Orna Ross 📚
I have become a creativist. Raised in the same Hiberno-Roman culture as you, Padraig, complete with a convent boarding school education, I was raised to believe in an omnipotent, patriarchal creator but where I once held God, I now hold the creative process itself.
It came to me as I sat at my desk one day, when I realised that the same process that makes a poem also made our planet, and everything within and without. This spirit, and the practices for body mind and soul that align me with its process, are what guide my days now.
Nancy Shebeneck's avatar
Nancy Shebeneck
What changes have occurred in your feelings about religion as you’ve gone through your own decades and experiences?
To answer this question would take telling
the story of my whole life.
And it has been an unexpected surprise!
God IS the only language of my life.
(Even when I am not always aware.)
Religion on the other hand does not
speak the same language.
In a conversation with my niece just last week, she stated,
“…and that’s why I don’t believe in organized religion.”
Resembling that remark, I later asked her,
“So what DO you believe/do for spiritual nourishment?”
She said, “I live my life.”
I’m not sure if she knows how richly profound
that statement really was/is.
I’m still examining it, but I believe it is right on.
A couple of quotes that I’ve saved over the years:
“The glory of God is a human being fully alive.”
(Saint Irenaeus)
“Our job is to play our holy part.
To come alive, flaring into bright life.
And then to connect with the others.”
(Casper ter Kuile)
Being alive.
Delighting in the splendors of this creation.
Holding tenderly the sorrows,
both our own and of others.
This is the religion that I have discovered
hiding in plain sight.

Courage and rage

And the call to creativity
[Editor’s note: By mistake, when this post was sent, it was open only to paid subscribers. It is now open to all, and the Poetry Unbound Substack will continue to be readable by everyone. Apologies for the error.]
Pádraig Ó Tuama68 LIKES12 RESTACKS
Kathy's avatar
Kathy
“Just keep going”. There are days - lately a lot of them - when it would be easier to crawl in a hole. But we can’t do that. Just keep going.
Leonard Edgerly's avatar
Leonard Edgerly
"Give me your hand" is what resonates with me as I wait in the pre-dawn for my wife to wake up. During the night, I found her hand and held it for a while. It wasn't clear whether she was awake or asleep, but her hand let me know she is still there with me as we let everything happen to us in our seventies.

Rumi speaks of war and love

Translation from Haleh Liza Gafori’s Water
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama497 LIKES78 RESTACKS
Author Violet's avatar
Author Violet
"I do not believe that either Rumi or the writers of Gilgamesh were naive about interventions, even though they used the language of love and flowers when speaking about war"
Hi, Anatolian (where Rumi lived) here. Rumi and other poets who lived in the same area in the middle ages could not explicitly state their opinions about war or politics, or they would be beheaded. In fact, following Rumi's poetry with symbols, many other Anatolian (both Turkish, Farsi and Arabic) poets started using symbols to disguise their criticism of the system and the sultans.
David Levy's avatar
David Levy
Hi, Padraig,
In 1984? I lived in Ireland for a year. In Dublin, I met Frank, a born Dubliner. We met in a writers’ group. Our friendship became a two hour walk every Friday. Frank, somehow, took this time off from work, and we strolled his beloved city. What a gift, for both of us. A two hour bouquet of memories every Friday. What if every angry man, warrior, could meet one other person, and once a week gave a tour of a beloved place, somewhere in this world, taking note of the details, the lovely, beloved, details: a favorite bit of moss, a whiff of roasting hops about to become Guiness, a desert hideaway, an island oasis, a spot where the ocean is fragrant with a salty fishy air, we would all be so busy giving and taking tours, we’d hardly have time for hatred. 🏮

All Eternity is in the Moment

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors48 LIKES6 RESTACKS
Van Burbach's avatar
Van Burbach
This was a great prompt. Loved the poem and your response. Here is mine:
Changeless Ever-changing Stream
Eternity flows like a mountain stream
Sometimes a rush, sometimes serene.
I walk along and see it change,
But all in all, it stays the same.
The stream is constant as it flows
But as I move, perspective grows.
I see the stream from different views,
With its various shades and hues.
Now rippling round a peaceful pool,
Now splashing over rocks like jewels.
Around each bend, it changes, moods,
The way it sings, the way it moves.
If in one place I could remain,
The stream to me would stay the same,
But I’d miss stories it can tell
And I would not know it half so well.
So I wander along its banks
And seeing more, the more give thanks.
Like moving through eternity,
The changeless stream changes me.
Abbie Shanahan's avatar
Abbie Shanahan
I played with some haiku on this one. Let me know if you all think it works:
spring has not arrived
until tiny shadows dance
outside the window
heart rising, racing
her darting form arrives home
to our red altar
body stilled in time
her wings confess the secret
falling and rising
she sips the nectar
lets me taste this offering—
small eternity

“Love / is paying attention”

Action in action
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama597 LIKES80 RESTACKS
Megan Mundy's avatar
Megan Mundy
The thing that made my heart warm this week was when my neighbour’s tween daughter ran away into a large park at dusk. My neighbour was understandably distressed and put a call out to our street WhatsApp group to keep an eye out for her. At least 10 different people replied immediately saying that they would head out and look for her. It felt like an uprising of love and concern. Of feeling connected to our neighbours. She was found and returned home and everyone was relieved and I felt incredibly grateful to live on a street where we look out for each other. Where a need was expressed and immediately answered by many.
Michael McCarthy's avatar
Michael McCarthy
When my four year old grandson, somewhat reluctantly, still offered me a piece of his cookie this past Friday. When my eight year old granddaughter, with an exuberant smile on her face, gave me a hug for attending the talent show she performed in last evening. When my daughter-in-law and son, consistently and without hesitation, demonstrate so many little ways of care and concern for my wife and I. When my sister, who is battling lung cancer, still shows up each day and chooses to find joy and gratitude in each moment. When good friends act on their beliefs — participating in “No Kings Protests” and “Immigrant Solidarity Prayer Walks.” Moreover, when we also make the time to celebrate the mystery and marvel of life and relationships.


Celebrate National Poetry Month and 2 years of Living Poetry with us!

Join us for a special reading and conversation on April 3, featuring poets and space holders, Lucia Deyi and Shimrit Janes.
Welcome to Living Poetry. I’m Allie, a poet with roots in the California chaparral.
6 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Shimrit Janes's avatar
Shimrit Janes
Ahhh Allie, am looking forward to being in conversation with you and Lucia so much!

A year of Poem of the Month.

Celebrating the winning poems from the first year of POTM.
Here are the winning poems from the first year of VERVE Poem of the Month. Initiated in 2025 as a way to platform poets, its become a core strand of our programme thanks to you!
VERVE Poetry5 LIKES3 RESTACKS

Is it a Good Place for Poetry?

A Conversation between Jo Bratten and Jeremy Wikeley
Jeremy Wikeley: The change in the season keeps sending me back to ‘Sunset over Watford’, the last poem in Climacteric, which is also one of my favourites – love as the love of “small things”, the dying daffodils, the sun setting over Metroland. I’ve been thinking about London a lot recently – my London (I can see the mobile mast at Crystal Palace from m…
Poetry London23 LIKES9 RESTACKS
Fran Lock's avatar
Fran Lock
Oh yes, that pressure to be "from", what an interesting read! :)

yes, poetry YES!

March 28, 2026
Yes, there will be a Zoom poetry reading and discussion this Saturday. Click on the underlined link below at the appointed time to join the reading.
Bruce Isaacson2 LIKES1 RESTACKS

Hospitable Poetry #8

Robert Charbonneau on "A Modest Love" by Dyer
If you are new to our series, here is the link to find the intro and the previous posts by Renee Emerson, A. A. Kostas, Brit McReynolds, Mark Rico, Esther Jane, Kilby Austin, and Zane Paxton.
Robert Charboneau and Abigail28 LIKES9 RESTACKS
Ann Collins's avatar
Ann Collins
Robert and Abigail! Everyone around the table is charmed by this poem. How can we resist the balance, and the playful logic Dyer uses to make turtles and kings equally vulnerable in love? And all the while, having us share this ride on the slow merry-go-round of our turning earth! This is lovely hospitality. Thank you so much for what you've made here.
M. A. Miller's avatar
M. A. Miller
The idea of “hospitable poetry” comes through clearly—short, concentrated, but still able to open something up for anyone at the table. I like how the explanation doesn’t strip the poem down but actually adds to the experience of it. That balance between craft and enjoyment feels rare.
The point about compression leading to universality stands out—it explains why something so small can still feel so complete. And that image of poetry being recited at a table, part of conversation and life, not separate from it, gives the whole piece a kind of warmth. It connects with something I’ve been thinking about too—how the most meaningful things are often the ones that are shared simply, not over-explained. I wrote a short piece around that kind of quiet meaning here: https://theeternalnowmm.substack.com/p/the-man-who-tried-to-surprise-god?r=71z4jh

Friday & Favourites Vol. 58

Embracing boredom
Dear friends,
Of Trees & Poetry, Julia McMullen, and E R Skulmoski33 LIKES2 RESTACKS
Victoria Cardona's avatar
Victoria Cardona
Julia, this is such a beautiful reminder of the power of intentional stillness. I loved how you framed “visual interest” not just as decoration, but as a tool for meditation and mental rest. The image of you watching finches instead of staring at a screen—what a gift to yourself!
I think we often underestimate boredom as a creative and reflective space. It’s in these low-pressure moments that our brains can wander, ruminate, and sometimes even stumble on inspiration we didn’t know we were looking for. I love the idea of setting up a little “zone-out zone” in your home—it doesn’t have to be fancy, just something that invites your attention without demanding it.
Also, your “Roman Empire” collection this week is such a perfect mix of inspiration—poetry, art, history, and cookies (because, yes, even creatives need snacks).
Thank you for sharing this. I might need to get my own bird feeder…
Silvia Vega's avatar
Silvia Vega
Beautiful!

Morsels of poetry

Three short poems with audio
These were written in seven minutes (or less), during the first workshop for Alix Klingenberg’s Spring Dreaming circle (which was a lot of fun). I consider them fragments more than finished wholes, and I know there’s a thing going on at the moment about not publishing your work right away, letting it have time to fully develop and what have you, but I truly believe th…
Sarah Thompson16 LIKES4 RESTACKS
Michelle R. Smith, LIMHP's avatar
Michelle R. Smith, LIMHP
Beautiful! Thank you for sharing!
Sara Joy Tiberio's avatar
Sara Joy Tiberio
These are all so lovely. I especially love the last one and the focus on the word "plume". Your voice was a comfort today.

Pen & Page Prompt #23

This Week: When Your Body Knows First
10 poetry notebooks7 LIKES2 RESTACKS
Laurel's avatar
Laurel
I’m usually not prompted to write a poem by what’s in front of me but I am often prompted to draw something. I keep my drawing materials in my room and there are always extra supplies in the Art Room at the Seniors Residence where I live. It might be pencil crayons or crayons or acrylic paint. I might keep it, display it or toss it out. I have a display case on the wall outside my room. I need to get some display boards to hang on my walls or lean on the dresser.
teatablepoet's avatar
teatablepoet
The beggening of my poem, which came first through subtle observations of the consistency of the moment. I actually found this prompt at the perfect moment, so I wrote from present tense. Slowly the poem turned into an over thought observation, an explanation of nonsensical realizations... But I liked how it started so here goes:
Let us race together, hair as a quirky, beating heart. As often it's persistentce, still and solitary, isolated elementary. From what is the rest
Let us undress, fast as the pace of this dancing race, quickly, wind rips shredds from our linen,
What has become of us but timmid?
Remissing souls in focus knots. A painting of the still life, rotting,
The sudden reaching forth of cotastrophy, remembering briefly, individual mortalities. Having come to causalities, through fallacies of, what fantastical iterations coinside. With what roughed through the stumbling bodies.
All is worth a day of reverie

Night Stretches Thin

Across my body
I used to enjoy these nights with you reading each other like our favourite books pulling at the covers to get a better look ever since your passing I trudge through the day with sleep as my only motivator when the time comes so does all my energy and I lie there knowing tomorrow will go the same way
Messy Ink Poetry9 LIKES4 RESTACKS


The Land That Raised Us

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and writing prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors81 LIKES9 RESTACKS
Marion Gibbon's avatar
Marion Gibbon
The Downs
When I was young
I walked up and down the Downs
My Dad would teach me the lore
Of plants and trees, of survival
I so loved that slow, undulating land
the springtime would see the cowslips
Bloom in their magnificence
I was raised on the doorstep of these hills
I wandered for miles and saw the seasons as they turned.
I would look out, and on clear days, you could
see the sea under cloud-filled skies, turning angry
as the rain descended and drenched you
reminding you of strength and limitations.
As evening descended, the skies would darken
but the stars would shine out to remind us
that we are all made from stardust
and as we wander and wonder our lives
become so full of awe as we descend to our mundane lives.
Van Burbach's avatar
Van Burbach
Lake Michigan Memories
Lake Michigan is still the same, the sand dunes and the waves.
They remind me of so many things from my childhood days.
Some memories are bright and clear, sparkling, like jewels,
Or like sunlight dancing on a wave top as it curls.
But beneath the sparkling white caps are waters deep and cold,
Hidden and forbidden, like the recesses of my soul.
This place calls me like a song, a home it longs to be,
But still I fear I don’t belong in the lives of those around me.

poetry cam batch 2: now half the price

We’re excited to release a second batch of Poetry Cameras, available now for $699 $349.
kelin18 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Jiji's avatar
Jiji
Thank you for making various languages available! I also hope you add a feature that prints the actual photo with the poem attached underneath. It would be just like writing a memo on a Polaroid picture to remember the moment, because memories of a scene fade so quickly.
Chase McCoy's avatar
Chase McCoy
I know the camera can't generate poems and print without an internet connection, but can I take photos on the go when offline and print them when back on wifi?

Poetry Prompt of the Week: Tell It Slant

In this contemplative prompt, sneak up on a truth too big to state directly.
I want us to swing for the fences this week. This little newsletter is always focused on the craft of poetry. Every week, I try to point to a new device for you to try out or tinker with. I talk a lot about poetic principles, like a poem teaching the reader how to read it, how it needs to set something up, build it out and then complicate it, surprising…
Robert Wood Lynn9 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Nimita Kaul's avatar
Nimita Kaul
Really enjoyed reading this post. I think unknowingly I've been trying to mould my poetry in slants :D Glad I read this today and to have such reference(s)!