The Rumpus
  • My Account
  • Essays
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Comics
  • Features
    • Interviews
    • The First Book
    • Reviews
    • Themed Months
    • What to Read When
  • Columns
    • Beyond the Page
    • Close Reads
    • Collaborative Criticism
    • ENOUGH
    • Funny Women
    • Parallel Practice
    • Voices on Addiction
    • We Are More
    • Conversations With Writers Braver Than Me
    • Dear Sugar
    • Roxane Gay
    • All Columns
  • Store
  • Prize
  • Rumpus Membership
  • Merch
  • Letters in the Mail
  • Bonfire Merch
  • My Account
Become a MemberDonate
Become a Member Donate
The Rumpus
The Rumpus The Rumpus
  • My Account
  • Essays
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Comics
  • Features
    • Interviews
    • The First Book
    • Reviews
    • Themed Months
    • What to Read When
  • Columns
    • Beyond the Page
    • Close Reads
    • Collaborative Criticism
    • ENOUGH
    • Funny Women
    • Parallel Practice
    • Voices on Addiction
    • We Are More
    • Conversations With Writers Braver Than Me
    • Dear Sugar
    • Roxane Gay
    • All Columns
  • Store
  • Prize
0

Posts by tag

poetry

2761 posts
Read
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Reviews

Red Doc> by Anne Carson

  • Camden Avery
  • April 19, 2013
Camden Avery reviews Anne Carson's Red Doc> today in Rumpus Poetry.
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 18: “b my apocalypse” by Laura Zaylea

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 18, 2013
b m y a p o c a l y p s e b   m y   a p o c a l y p s e
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 17: “Brandon Bryant: MQ-1 Predator Sensor Operator” by Jill McDonough

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 17, 2013
Brandon Bryant: MQ-1 Predator Sensor Operator He lives in Montana now. Talks to German magazines, plus Canadian radio shows. He coaches soccer, still has to tell us everything. How it…
Read
Read
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Reviews

Incarnadine by Mary Szybist

  • Kent Shaw
  • April 17, 2013
Kent Shaw reviews Mary Szybist's Incarnadine today in Rumpus Poetry.
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 16: “Darth Vader, King Laios (Fill Out Their Applications as, Across the Lobby, Genghis Khan’s “Cat’s in the Cradle” Ringtone Plays): Fathers of the Year” by Douglas Kearney

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 16, 2013
Darth Vader, King Laios (Fill Out Their Applications as, Across the Lobby, Genghis Khan’s “Cat’s in the Cradle” Ringtone Plays): Fathers of the Year
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 15: “The Plagiarist” by Nicky Beer

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 15, 2013
The Plagiarist I only steal from the ones you’ve never heard of,
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 14: “Sober Lullaby” by Matthew Henriksen

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 14, 2013
Sober Lullaby Oak tree in time this story makes no recognition A photo will not distance music caught in a wind That entered the room where the child slept
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 13: “Ghosts” by Brachah Goykadosh

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 13, 2013
Ghosts Ghosts who I loved wandering through the glass doors and the turnstiles without seeing me walking swiftly behind them.
Read
Read
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Reviews

It’s No Good by Kirill Medvedev

  • David Peak
  • April 13, 2013
David Peak reviews Kirill Medvedev's It's No Good today in Rumpus Poetry.
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 12: “Feast Day” by Rita Mae Reese

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 12, 2013
Feast Day                 for Flannery O’Connor
Read
Read
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Reviews

Uncanny Valley by Jon Woodward

  • Andrew Field
  • April 12, 2013
Andrew Field reviews Jon Woodward's Uncanny Valley today in Rumpus Poetry.
Read
  • Poems
  • Poetry

National Poetry Month Day 11: “Billy Divine” by Adam McGovern

  • Rumpus Original Poems
  • April 11, 2013
Billy Divine The American Primeval is not the green garden we think we’ve lost it’s stark white cloudless sky above a cinder-gray shack
Read

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 173 174 175 176 177 … 231 Next
Become a Member!

BECOME A MONTHLY OR ANNUAL RUMPUS MEMBER AND RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE CONTENT, EDITORIAL INSIGHTS, MERCH DISCOUNTS, AND MORE! OUR GOAL IS TO REACH AT LEAST 600 MEMBERS BY THE END OF 2025 TO COVER OUR BASIC OPERATING COSTS.

Join today!
COMMUNITY SUPPORT KEEPS THE MAGAZINE GOING!

Founded in 2009, The Rumpus is one of the longest-running online literary magazines around. We’ve been independent from the start, which means we’re not connected with any academic institution, wealthy benefactor, or part of a larger publishing company. The vast majority of the magazine’s funding comes from reader support.

In other words, we can’t survive without YOU!

Make a Tax-Deductible Donation
Letters in the mail (from authors)

Receive letters from some of our favorite authors written just for Rumpus readers and sent straight into your (snail) mailbox 2x a month!

sign up now!

Keep in Touch

The Rumpus publishes original fiction, poetry, literary humor writing, comics, essays, book reviews, and interviews with authors and artists of all kinds. Our mostly volunteer-run magazine strives to be a platform for risk-taking voices and writing that might not find a home elsewhere. We lift up new voices alongside those of more established writers our readers may already know and love. We want to bring new perspectives into the conversation that will make us all look deeper.

We believe that literature builds community—and if reading The Rumpus makes you feel more connected, please show your support! Get your Rumpus merch in our online store. Subscribe to receive Letters in the Mail from authors or join us by becoming a monthly or yearly Member.

We support independent bookstores! 10% of sales on any titles purchased through our Bookshop.org page or affiliate links benefits the magazine.

The Rumpus in your Inbox!
The Rumpus
  • Team
  • About & Writers’ Guidelines
  • Advertise
  • TOS and Privacy Policy
© 2025, The Rumpus.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.