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Poem-a-Day

The only daily poetry series publishing new work by today’s poets.

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Poem-a-day

I speak with the future.

We sit on our skeletons’ bones. 
We hear with our skeletons’ bones.
We speak of beauty by moving our jaws and our teeth.

The original meaning of Paradise: a place, 
a walled garden. 
Our lives, our stories, this hour inside one.
A staircase from Piranesi. A hummingbird drinking.

Outside it, vanishing species and rivers.
Outside it, Nanjing, Ninevah, Dresden.
Outside it, Gaza, Sudan, Myanmar, Kyiv. Here.

The world starts and ends, starts, ends, ends again,
restarts.  

A kalpa is brief, and wall-less.

Unborn ones, take nothing for granted.
Not nectar, not thirst.

May your lives be uneclipsed, your failures be passing.

May you have your portions of beauty, of grief, 
in a garden whose plants and birds I cannot imagine. 

Copyright © 2026 by Jane Hirshfield. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 30, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets. 

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Jane Hirshfield

Jane Hirshfield
Photo credit: Nick Rozsa
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About Poem-a-Day

Poem-a-Day is the original and only daily digital poetry series featuring over 250 new, previously unpublished poems by today’s talented poets each year. Danusha Laméris is the Guest Editor for March. Read or listen to a Q&A with Laméris about his curatorial process, and learn more about the 2026 Guest Editors. Support Poem-a-Day.  

If you have any questions about Poem-a-Day, visit our Poem-a-Day FAQ.

Previous Poems

Title Author Date
damn right it’s betta than yours (audio only) LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs
Gitanjali 89 Rabindranath Tagore
Nearly a Valediction Marilyn Hacker
To See as Far as the Grandfather World Ray Young Bear
To the Mexican Nightingale Manuel Acuña
The Owl Arthur Sze
Ecstasy Gabriela Mistral
Blood History Reginald Dwayne Betts
Saturday 9/15/01 Lucille Clifton
this is what kafka really meant when he wished to be a red indian m.s. RedCherries

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