Welcome to the Poet Lore Website!
Established in 1889, Poet Lore is the oldest continuously published poetry magazine
in the United States. Under the stewardship of its present publisher,
The Writer's Center, Poet Lore publishes semi-annual
installments of the finest contemporary poetry both by established writers and by those
breaking into print. Poet Lore also prints reviews of new poetry books and books about
poetry and poets.
Editors' Note From Our Latest Issue:
Meanwhile in Philadelphia, Charlotte Porter and Helen A. Clarke were launching Poet Lore, a journal that set out to examine "Shakespeare, Browning, and the Comparative Study of Literature." With uncanny foresight, these two scholars, who were also life partners (they exchanged rings in a commitment ceremony and lived together until Clarke's death at 65), published a wide spectrum of essays and book reviews as well as translations of the original work—plays, poems, prose—of such writers as Chekhov, Ibsen, Strindberg, Gorky, D'Annunzio, Mistral, and Tagore, presenting those authors to American readers who may never before have heard their names. As Porter later described the journal's mission: "Our standards were evolutionary and relative in principal in a day when the static and the has-been rather than the dynamic and coming-into-birth constituted the measure in criticism."
The editors read voraciously and found relationships among distinct cultural movements of which few Americans were even aware. To list only three of the essays they published in those early years—"Dante's Imperialism," "The Modernism of Hafiz," "Shakespeare in Japan"—is to suggest the range of their inquiry. They moved beyond Europe in their search for literary innovation, extending their sphere of interest to the Middle East, Asia, South America. And they looked with respect upon what was invisible to so many at home, publishing translations of indigenous American chants. In 1914, introducing the journal's 25th anniversary issue, Porter and Clarke wrote: "Poet Lore is introducing to its readers today the unknown geniuses who are to become world famous tomorrow." It seems a wild boast—until you read what they'd published.
With humility, curiosity, and a keen sense of service, we carry on the work they began and passed into the care of so many dedicated successors. Although today's Poet Lore is clearly distinguishable from its early incarnations, its central purpose is unchanged: we are mindful of tradition and eager for discovery. In this special anniversary edition, along with our regular content, we offer you a showcase of 15 celebrated contemporary poets who first appeared in Poet Lore decades ago, along with reviews by 11 poet-critics of outstanding books that were largely overlooked. In the next century, other readers may peruse what we've published here. We hope that what they find transcends our own short moment.
