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The 32 Most Iconic Poems in the English Language

Plus some bonus poems, because we love you.

Literary Hub

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painting of woman enraptured by a poet

When the anniversary of the publication of Robert Frost’s iconic poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” came around, it spurred the Literary Hub office into a long conversation about their favorite poems, the most iconic poems written in English, and which poems we should all have already read (or at least be reading next). Turns out, despite frequent (false) claims that poetry is dead and/or irrelevant and/or boring, there are plenty of poems that have sunk deep into our collective consciousness as cultural icons. (What makes a poem iconic? For our purposes here, it’s primarily a matter of cultural ubiquity, though unimpeachable excellence helps any case.) So for those of you who were not present for our epic office argument, I have listed some of them here.

NB that I limited myself to one poem per poet—which means that the impetus for this list actually gets bumped for the widely quoted (and misunderstood) “The Road Not Taken,” but so it goes. I also excluded book-length poems, because they’re really a different form. Finally, despite the headline, I’m sure there are many, many iconic poems out there that I’ve missed—so feel free to extend this list in the comments. But for now, happy reading (and re-reading):


William Carlos Williams, “The Red Wheelbarrow

The most anthologized poem of the last 25 years for a reason. See also: “This is Just to Say,” which, among other things, has spawned a host of memes and parodies.

T. S. Eliot, “The Waste Land

Without a doubt one of the most important poems of the 20th century. “It has never lost its glamour,” Paul Muldoon observed. “It has never failed to be equal to both the fracture of its own era and what, alas, turned out to be the even greater fracture of the ongoing 20th century and now, it seems, the 21st century.” See also: “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.”

Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken

Otherwise known as “the most misread poem in America.” See also: “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.” And “Birches.” All begin in delight and end in wisdom, as Frost taught us great poems should.

Gwendolyn Brooks, “We Real Cool

This blew my mind in high school, and I wasn’t the only one.

Elizabeth Bishop, “One Art

Bishop’s much loved and much discussed ode to loss, which Claudia Roth Pierpont called “a triumph of control, understatement, wit. Even of self-mockery, in the poetically pushed rhyme word “vaster,” and the ladylike, pinkies-up “shan’t.” An exceedingly rare mention of her mother—as a woman who once owned a watch. A continent standing in for losses larger than itself.”

Emily Dickinson, “Because I could not stop for Death –

The truth is, there are lots of equally iconic Dickinson poems, so consider this a stand-in for them all. Though, as Jay Parini has noted, this poem is perfect, “one of Dickinson’s most compressed and chilling attempts to come to terms with mortality.”

Langston Hughes, “Harlem

One of the defining works of the Harlem Renaissance, by its greatest poet. It also, of course, gave inspiration and lent a title to another literary classic: Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun.

Sylvia Plath, “Daddy

To be quite honest, my favorite Plath poem is “The Applicant.” But “Daddy” is still the most iconic, especially if you’ve ever heard her read it aloud.

Robert Hayden, “Middle Passage

The most famous poem, and a terribly beautiful one, by our country’s first African-American Poet Laureate (though the position was then called Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress). See also: “Those Winter Sundays, which despite what I wrote above may be equally as famous.”

Wallace Stevens, “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird

This one takes the cake for the sheer number of “thirteen ways of looking at x” knockoffs that I’ve seen. But please see also: “The Emperor of Ice-Cream.”

Allen Ginsberg, “Howl

With On the Road, the most enduring piece of literature from the mythologized Beat Generation, and of the two, the better one. Even the least literate of your friends would probably recognize the line “I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness . . .”

Maya Angelou, “Still I Rise

So iconic, it was a Google Doodle.

Dylan Thomas, “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night

I mean, have you seen Interstellar? (Or Dangerous Minds or Independence Day?)

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, “Kubla Khan

Or Citizen Kane? (See also: “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”)

Percy Bysshe Shelley, “Ozymandias

. . . or Breaking Bad?

Edgar Allan Poe, “The Raven

We had some votes for “Annabel Lee,” on account of its earworminess, but among the many appearances and references of Poe in pop culture, “The Raven” is certainly the most common.

Louise Glück, “Mock Orange

One of those poems passed hand to hand between undergraduates who will grow up to become writers.

Paul Laurence Dunbar, “We Wear the Mask

Dunbar’s most famous poem, and arguably his best, which biographer Paul Revell described as “a moving cry from the heart of suffering. The poem anticipates, and presents in terms of passionate personal regret, the psychological analysis of the fact of blackness in Frantz Fanon’s Peau Noire, Masques Blancs, with a penetrating insight into the reality of the black man’s plight in America.”

e.e. cummings, “i carry your heart with me

As quoted at many, many weddings.

Marianne Moore, “Poetry

All else aside, the fact that it starts with hating poetry has made it a favorite among schoolchildren of all ages. See also: “The Fish.”

Rudyard Kipling, “If

According to someone in the Literary Hub office who would know, this poem is all over sports stadiums and locker rooms. Serena Williams is into it, which is proof enough for me.

Gertrude Stein, “Sacred Emily

Because a rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.

William Blake, “The Tyger

Tyger, tyger, burning bright . . . Blake famously wrote music to go along with his poems—the originals have been lost, but this verse has been widely interpreted by musicians as well as repeated to many sleepy children.

Robert Burns, “To a Mouse

As (further) immortalized by John Steinbeck.

Walt Whitman, “Song of Myself

The most famous poem from Whitman’s celebrated Leaves of Grass, and selected by Jay Parini as the best American poem of all time. “Whitman reinvents American poetry in this peerless self-performance,” Parini writes, “finding cadences that seem utterly his own yet somehow keyed to the energy and rhythms of a young nation waking to its own voice and vision. He calls to every poet after him, such as Ezra Pound, who notes in “A Pact” that Whitman “broke the new wood.””

Philip Larkin, “This Be The Verse

We know, we know, it’s all your parents’ fault.

William Shakespeare, “Sonnet 18” (“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”)

Like Dickinson, we could have put several of Shakespeare’s sonnets in this slot. Most people only recognize the first couplets anyway.

Audre Lorde, “Power

A uniquely American poem, written in 1978, that should be outdated by now, but still is not.

Frank O’Hara, “Meditations in an Emergency

Courtesy Don Draper, circa season 2.

John McCrae, “In Flanders Fields

Probably the most iconic—and most quoted—poem from WWI. Particularly popular in Canada, where McCrae is from.

Lewis Carroll, “Jabberwocky

Still the most iconic nonsense poem ever written.

W. B. Yeats, “The Second Coming

Otherwise known as “the most thoroughly pillaged piece of literature in English.” Just ask our hero Joan Didion. Joan knows what’s up.

One more thing. The above list is too white and male and old, because our literary iconography is still too white and male and old. So, here are some other poems that we here at the Literary Hub office also consider iconic, though they are perhaps not as widely anthologized/quoted/referenced/used to amp up the corny drama in films as some of the above (yet).

Adrienne Rich, “Diving into the Wreck

One of my very favorites from Rich’s rich (sorry) oeuvre. I read it in college and have been quoting it ever since.

Patricia Lockwood, “Rape Joke

The poem that officially broke the internet in 2013.

Lucille Clifton, “Homage to My Hips

She’s just . . . so . . . damn . . . sexy. See also: “To a Dark Moses” and “won’t you celebrate with me,” because Clifton is the greatest.

Lucie Brock-Broido, “Am Moor

This happens to be my own personal favorite Brock-Broido poem, though almost any would do here.

Sappho, “The Anactoria Poem” (tr. Jim Powell)

I’m breaking my rule about the poems being written in English to include Sappho, whose work is uniquely appealing for being almost lost to us. The Anactoria poem is her most famous, though I have to say I also have a major soft spot for this fragment, translated by Anne Carson:

so
]

]
]
]
]

Go                     [
so we may see [
]
lady

of gold arms     [
]
]
doom
]

And when I say “soft spot” I mean it sends me into ecstatic fits.

Kevin Young, “Errata

The greatest wedding poem that no one ever reads at their wedding.

Mark Leidner, “Romantic Comedies

For those who enjoy snorting their coffee while reading poetry.

Muriel Rukeyser, “The Book of the Dead

A long, legendary poem, written in 1938, about the illness of a group of miners in Gauley Bridge, West Virginia. “Coming hot on the heels of modernist long poem masterpieces like Eliot’s “The Wasteland” or Stein’s “Tender Buttons,” the poem’s deliberate lucidity isn’t just an aesthetic choice—it’s a political one,” Colleen Abel wrote in Ploughshares. “Rukeyser, from the beginning of “Book of the Dead,” seeks the reader’s participation in the journey to Gauley Bridge. The reader is implicated from the first section, “The Road,” in which Rukeyser calls outward to her audience: “These are roads you take when you think of your country.” The disaster Rukeyser is about to explore is a part of “our country” and the reader will have no choice but to confront it.”

Carolyn Forché, “The Colonel

What you have heard is true. This poem is unforgettable.

Rita Dove, “After Reading Mickey in the Night Kitchen for the Third Time Before Bed

Again, a thousand poems by Rita Dove would do; this is the one that sticks in my brain.

Nikki Giovanni, “Ego Tripping

I mean, “I am so hip even my errors are correct” should probably be your mantra. Watch Giovanni perform her poem here.

Terrance Hayes, “The Golden Shovel

Hayes’s homage to Gwendolyn Brooks is a masterpiece in its own right.


Emily Temple is the managing editor at Lit Hub. Her first novel, The Lightness, was published by William Morrow/HarperCollins in June 2020. You can buy it here.

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This post originally appeared on Literary Hub and was published March 7, 2019. This article is republished here with permission.