These love poems I’ve collected vary widely. Some are classic love poems. Some love poems were posted on social media this year. Some rhyme. Others don’t. Most are romantic. A few are sad or angry. All of them are beautiful. All of them are about love.
1. “Any Lit” by Harryette Mullen
Excerpt: You are a ukulele beyond my microphone
2. “To the Girl Who Works at Starbucks” by Rudy Francisco
3. “Atlas” by U.A. Fanthorpe
Excerpt: There is a kind of love called maintenance Which stores the WD40 and knows when to use it Which checks the insurance, and doesnt forget The milkman; which remembers to plant bulbs; Which answers letters; which knows the way The money goes; which deals with dentists
4. “When a Boy Tells You He Loves You” by Edwin Bodney
5. “When You Come” by Maya Angelou
Excerpt: When you come to me, unbidden, Beckoning me To long-ago rooms, Where memories lie.
6. “Sonnet 29” by William Shakespeare
Excerpt: When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes, I all alone beweep my outcast state, And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries, And look upon myself and curse my fate, Wishing me like to one more rich in hope, Featured like him, like him with friends possessed,
7. “Sonnet 116” by William Shakespeare
48. “Bluebird Typewriter Poetry #7” by Sean Bates
9. “It is Here” by Harold Pinter
Excerpt: (for A) What sound was that? I turn away, into the shaking room. What was that sound that came in on the dark? What is this maze of light it leaves us in
10. “Valentine” by John Fuller
11. “Echo” by Carol Ann Duffy
I think I was searching for treasures or stones in the clearest of pools when your face… when your face, like the moon in a wel
12. “It’s all I have to bring today” by Emily Dickinson
Excerpt: It’s all I have to bring today— This, and my heart beside— This, and my heart, and all the fields— And all the meadows wide—
14. “To the Desert” by Benjamin Alire Sáenz
Excerpt: I came to you one rainless August night. You taught me how to live without the rain. You are thirst and thirst is all I know. You are sand, wind, sun, and burning sky, The hottest blue. You blow a breeze and brand Your breath into my mouth. You reach—then bend Your force, to break, blow, burn, and make me new.
15. “A Glimpse” by Walt Whitman
Excerpt: A glimpse through an interstice caught, Of a crowd of workmen and drivers in a bar-room around the stove late of a winter night, and I unremark’d seated in a corner, Of a youth who loves me and whom I love, silently approaching and seating himself near, that he may hold me by the hand,
16. “I Wanna Be Yours” by John Cooper Clarke
I wanted to make myself like the ravine so that all good things would flow into me. Because the ravine is lowly, it receives an abundance.
18. “Queen Anne’s Lace” by William Carlos Williams
Excerpt: Her body is not so white as anemone petals nor so smooth—nor so remote a thing. It is a field of the wild carrot taking thefield by force; the grass does not raise above it.
19. “When Love Arrives” by Sarah Kay & Phil Kaye
20. “To You” by Kenneth Koch
Excerpt: I love you as a sheriff searches for a walnut That will solve a murder case unsolved for years Because the murderer left it in the snow beside a window Through which he saw her head, connecting with Her shoulders by a neck, and laid a red Roof in her heart. For this we live a thousand years;
21. “Polarities” by Kenneth Siessor
Excerpt: Sometimes she is like sherry, like the sun through a vessel of glass, Like light through an oriel window in a room of yellow wood; Sometimes she is the colour of lions, of sand in the fire of noon, Sometimes as bruised with shadows as the afternoon. A post shared by amanda lovelace (@ladybookmad) on Oct 29, 2018 at 4:28pm PDT
23. “When We Are Old And These Rejoicing Veins” by Edna St. Vincent Millay
Excerpt: When we are old and these rejoicing veins Are frosty channels to a muted stream, And out of all our burning their remains No feeblest spark to fire us, even in dream, This be our solace: that it was not said When we were young and warm and in our prime,
24. “Witch Wife” by Edna St. Vincent Millay
Excerpt: She is neither pink nor pale, And she never will be all mine; She learned her hands in a fairy-tale, And her mouth on a valentine.
25. “Typewriter Series #2091” by Tyler Knott Gregson
26. “Rondel of Merciless Beauty” by Geoffrey Chaucer
Excerpt: Your two great eyes will slay me suddenly; Their beauty shakes me who was once serene; Straight through my heart the wound is quick and keen.Only your word will heal the injury To my hurt heart, while yet the wound is clean— Your two great eyes will slay me suddenly;
27. “To An Army Wife in Sardis” from Sappho translated by Mary Barnard
Excerpt: To an army wife, in Sardis:
28. “The Good Morrow” by John Donne
29. “A Love Song for Lucinda” by Langston Hughes
Excerpt: Love Is a ripe plum Growing on a purple tree. Taste it once And the spell of its enchantment Will never let you be.
30. “Twenty One Love Poems” by Adrienne Rich
31. “I Love You” by Carl Sandberg
Excerpt: I love you for what you are, but I love you yet more for what you are going to be. I love you not so much for your realities as for your ideals. I pray for your desires that they may be great, rather than for your satisfactions, which may be so hazardously little.
34. “Sonnet XLIII”” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Excerpt: How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. I love thee to the depth and breadth and height My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight For the ends of being and ideal grace.
35. “Falling Stars” by Rainer Maria Rilke
Excerpt: Do you remember still the falling stars that like swift horses through the heavens raced and suddenly leaped across the hurdles of our wishes—do you recall?
36. “Photograph” by Andrea Gibson
37. “Litany” by Billy Collins
38. “Love Poem” by Audre Lorde
Excerpt: Speak earth and bless me with what is richest make sky flow honey out of my hips rigis mountains spread over a valley carved out by the mouth of rain. The sky was lit by the splendor of the moon So powerful I fell to the ground
40. “Habitation” by Margaret Atwood
Excerpt: Marriage is not a house, or even a tent it is before that, and colder: My desire is always the same; wherever Life deposits me: I want to stick my toe & soon my whole body into the water.
42. “Mad Girl’s Love Song” by Sylvia Plath
Excerpt: “I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead; I lift my lids and all is born again. (I think I made you up inside my head.) The stars go waltzing out in blue and red, And arbitrary blackness gallops in: I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.
43. “somewhere i have never traveled” by E.E. Cummings
44. “love is a place” by E.E. Cummings
Excerpt: love is a place & through this place of love move (with brightness of peace) all places
46. “Your Feet” by Pablo Neruda
Excerpt: When I cannot look at your face I look at your feet. Your feet of arched bone, your hard little feet. I know that they support you, and that your sweet weight rises upon them.
47. “The World as Meditation” by Wallace Stevens
49. “Married Love” by Kuan Tao-sheng, translated by Kenneth Rexroth and Ling Chung
Excerpt: You and I Have so much love, That it Burns like a fire, In which we bake a lump of clay Molded into a figure of you And a figure of me.
50. “How Falling in Love is like Owning a Dog” by Taylor Mali
51. “Love Is a Fire that Burns Unseen” by Luís Vaz de Camões, translated by Richard Zenith
Excerpt: Love is a fire that burns unseen, a wound that aches yet isn’t felt, an always discontent contentment, a pain that rages without hurting,
52. “Never Give All the Heart” by W.B. Yeats
Excerpt: Never give all the heart, for love Will hardly seem worth thinking of To passionate women if it seem Certain, and they never dream That it fades out from kiss to kiss; For everything that’s lovely is But a brief, dreamy, kind delight.
53. “How to Love Your Introvert” by Kevin Yang
54. “Seduction” by Nikki Giovanni
55. “Camomile Tea” by Katherine Mansfield
Excerpt: Outside the sky is light with stars; There’s a hollow roaring from the sea. And, alas! for the little almond flowers, The wind is shaking the almond tree. How little I thought, a year ago, In the horrible cottage upon the Lee That he and I should be sitting so And sipping a cup of camomile tea.
56. “Will You Still Love Me?” by Arielle Wilburn
57. “Naming The Heartbeats” by Aimee Nezhukumatathil
58. “When I Say That Loving Me Is Kind of Like Being a Chicago Bulls Fan” By Hanif Abdurraqib
What are your favorite love poems? I’m basically addicted to love poetry now, so let me know what I missed in the comments. Want even more love (like lots of it)? Check out our list of 100 Must-Read Books With ‘Love’ In The Title.