July 4th Poems
For Independence Day, we bring you this wide-ranging selection of poems, articles, blog posts, and podcasts. These poets form a chorus of many Americas.
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Emma Lazarus
This famous Statue of Liberty sonnet famously welcomes “homeless, tempest-tost” newcomers.
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Jimmy Santiago Baca
The poet tallies harsh realities that sometimes follow the Statue of Liberty's greeting.
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Walt Whitman
In Whitman’s vision, American workers sing “what belongs to him or her and to none else.”
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Gregory Djanikian
The poet recounts the oddities of a traditional American July 4th cookout with his immigrant parents.
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Lawrence Ferlinghetti
This poem lists so many things that our country is still waiting for.
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Allen Ginsberg
This famous poem begins “America I’ve given you all and now I’m nothing. / America two dollars and twentyseven cents January 17, 1956. / I can’t stand my own mind.”
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Tony Hoagland
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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Why not share this poem which proclaims, “Listen, my children, and you shall hear / Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere...”
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Claude McKay
Acknowledging the United States’ fraught past, Claude McKay confesses, “I love this cultured hell that tests my youth.”
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Rita Dove
A poem about Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806), a black man appointed to the commission that surveyed and laid out Washington, D.C.
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Myra Sklarew
Like Rita Dove, Myra Sklarew pays homage to African Americans who helped build Washington, DC.
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John Haines
A quiet poem that shows that not everyone celebrates this holiday the same way.
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May Swenson
An analytical critique of our annual fireworks ceremonies, using wartime vocabulary.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Alexander on how the Derek Walcott-toting, June Jordan-quoting president will affect poets and poetry.
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Joel Brouwer
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Javier O. Huerta
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David Biespiel
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W. S. Di Piero
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June Jordan
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Abigail Deutsch
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Langston Hughes
An historical examination of the trajectory of African American poetry, beginning with Lucy Terry, a slave, in 1746, and continuing through Phillis Wheatley and Paul Laurence Dunbar to the rising generation of African American poets in the 1950s and 60s.
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The Editors
Includes Independence Day poems such as “Danitra’s Family Reunion” by Nikki Grimes.