In light of the Coronavirus crisis, please join Poetry Daily for an impromptu series, What Keeps Us For the rest of March we will post poems to sustain and uplift through trying times. We thank you for reading and hope that you will share poems with your friends and neighbors. Please be well.
Czeslaw Milosz
Hope is with you when you believe
The earth is not a dream but living flesh,
That sight, touch, and hearing do not lie,
That all things you have ever seen here
Are like a garden looked at from a gate.

You cannot enter. But you're sure it's there.
Could we but look more clearly and wisely
We might discover somewhere in the garden
A strange new flower and an unnamed star.

Some people say we should not trust our eyes,
That there is nothing, just a seeming,
These are the ones who have no hope.
They think that the moment we turn away,
The world, behind our backs, ceases to exist,
As if snatched up by the hand of thieves.
from the book NEW AND COLLECTED POEMS: 1931-2001 / Ecco Press
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Poetry Daily is Thinking of You

Thanks so much to all our readers, donors, poets and publishers who have supported our work at Poetry Daily. Please be safe, wash your hands, and stay inside if you are able.
Color head shot of Brian Teare
Brian Teare Wins Four Quartets Prize

Of the winning poem, "Toxics Release Inventory (Essay on Man)," the judges wrote, "With his walking-activated line and stanza breaks and his mix of personal experience, documentary materials, and political implication, Brian Teare writes one of our times’ most affecting poems on environmental crises and ethical responsibility." Brian Teare sits on the Editorial Board of Poetry Daily.

via POETRY SOCIETY OF AMERICA
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Sally Keith's handwritten version of Maya Angelou's "When Great Tress Fall)

"I was in college in a small school in Central Pennsylvania and must have ended up in the large lecture hall to hear Maya Angelou by accident, if not for an assignment....The experience sent me off into the stacks to read for myself some of the poems I had heard Angelou read. Rereading I realized I could begin to rehear the music I had heard in person; following the lines, as I read out-loud, I felt my own voice approximate the same sounds. This was thrilling and utterly new.
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