Poems of Anxiety and Uncertainty
Confronting and coping with uncharted terrains through poetry.
BY The Editors

When major parts of our lives seem to change in a flash, we are reminded that poetry can help us to cope with new realities and assess the unknowns ahead. When we are stepping out into uncharted terrain, alone or together, poetry can capture our emotions. It can share our vulnerabilities and scars, along with our strengths.
Poets are seekers and questioners. They explore the unknown and help to give it shape. The insights and wisdom in the following poems below are hard-won; more often, it is simply the naming of the fear—personal, spiritual, or political—that offers solace, reminding us that people are connected by our worries and doubts as well as our joys. By resisting closure and easy answers and sounding out the darkness, these poems remind us that poetry has always been able to cope with uncertainties, ambiguities, and shades of gray.
- The Second Coming William Butler Yeats
 
- As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life Walt Whitman
 
- Renascence Edna St. Vincent Millay
 
- Speech: “To be, or not to be, that is the question” William Shakespeare
 
- Sanctuary Jean Valentine
 
- Lines Written Near San Francisco Louis Simpson
 
- Unravelling / Shock Nathaniel Tarn
 
- What Kind of Times Are These Adrienne Rich
 
- Long, too long America Walt Whitman
 
- Then Aaron Shurin
 
- Where am I Paul Celan
 
- Valerio Magrelli
 
- Good Bones Maggie Smith
 
- In this short Life that only lasts an hour (1292) Emily Dickinson
 
- There's a certain Slant of light, (320) Emily Dickinson
 
- The Letter Mary Ruefle
 
- Little Exercise Elizabeth Bishop
 
- Allow Me Chungmi Kim
 
- This Room and Everything in It Li-Young Lee
 
- Jamaal May
 
- Tarfia Faizullah
 
- Responding Juliana Spahr
 
- June Jordan
 
- What Do You Call Cornelius Eady
 
- The Colonel Carolyn Forché
 
- To Our Land Mahmoud Darwish
 
- Basil Bunting
 


