Poems about Love speak about the passion, desire and vulnerability of being in love.
Romantic relationships are the spice of life, they make us feel alive in a way that nothing else can. Genuine romance exists when two people show that they care for each other through small acts of love and affection. We feel loved and cared for when we know that our significant other is thinking about how to give us the most pleasure. Romance is the key to keeping the sparks flying. Without it, any relationship will soon lose its shine.
100 Most Popular Love Poems
-
1
From My Heart By
Mrs. Creeves
Short Love Poem For The Man I Love
in Short Love Poems
-
2
So Happy And So Proud By
Scott Sabatini
Poem To Make Your Girlfriend Smile
in I Love You Poems
-
3
Forever And Always By
Mercedes
Thank You To Boyfriend Poem
in Boyfriend Poems
-
4
If I Thought By
Poem About The Love I Have For My Best Friend
in Romantic Poems
-
5
[i Carry Your Heart With Me(i Carry It In] By
E.E. Cummingsin Famous Love Poems
-
6
What I Love About You By
Nidhi Kaul
in Boyfriend Poems
-
7
Would It Be Ok? By
Ryan Stiltz
Sweet Poem For Girlfriend
in Poems for Her
-
8
My Melody By
Eric Pribyl
Love’s First Words
in Poems for Her
-
9
The Meaning Of Love By
Krina Shah
in Romantic Poems
-
10
Will You Ever Understand? By
Toni
Poem About Your Life Being Touched By Someone
in Husband Poems
-
11
My Everything By
Dean Coombes
How Much I Love You
in Sweet Love Poems
-
12
A Gift From God By
John P. Read
Poem About The Power Of Love
in True Love Poems
-
13
God’s Gift To Me By
Kerry R. DeVore
in Sweet Love Poems
-
14
Silence Is Golden By
Shelagh Bullman
Poem Of Love And Adoration
in Falling in Love Poems
-
15
Baby When You Hold Me By
Shelagh Bullman
in Romantic Poems
-
16
Let Me By
Randy Batiquin
I Will Take Care Of You
in Romantic Poems
-
17
Love So Amazing By
Elaine Chetty
Short Romantic Love Poem
in Short Love Poems
-
18
What My Heart Wants To Say By
Kalie Blaymires
You Are My Soulmate
in I Love You Poems
-
19
Silence Is Golden By
Hanna Eardley
The Simple Things I Love About You
in Romantic Poems
-
20
Words Are Not Enough By
Denese H. Boyett
Forever Love Once In A Lifetime Poem
in Romantic Poems
-
21
When I’m With You By
Blakelee
Being In Love Poem
in True Love Poems
-
22
If You Forget Me By
Pablo Nerudain Famous Love Poems
-
23
When Do I Think Of You? By
Sherry Hilderbrand
Thinking Of You Always
in True Love Poems
-
24
Your Smile On My Mind By
Luke O. Meyers
Poem About A Girl I Can’t Get Off My Mind
in Short Love Poems
-
25
No Matter What By
Angie M Flores
I Will Always Love You Poem
in I Love You Poems
-
26
I Love You By
Ella Wheeler Wilcoxin Famous Love Poems
-
27
If Only She Knew By
Kiara Wilson
in Falling in Love Poems
-
28
Have You Ever Met Someone… By
Jason J. Beaton
Poem About A Beautiful Person
in Poems for Her
-
29
When I Die I Want Your Hands On My Eyes By
Pablo Nerudain Famous Love Poems
-
30
What Do I See In You? By
Shelagh Bullman
in Sweet Love Poems
-
31
Carry On By
Briana D. Washington
Poem About Coming To Terms With A Break-Up
in Moving On Poems
-
32
One Hundred Love Sonnets By
Pablo Nerudain Famous Love Poems
-
33
To You I Promise By
Danny Blackburn
Love’s Enduring Promise: A Poem For A Wife
in Wife Poems
-
34
Love’s Language By
Ella Wheeler Wilcoxin Famous Love Poems
-
35
How Do I Love Thee? By
Elizabeth Barrett Browningin Famous Love Poems
-
36
Don’t Go Far Off, Not Even For A Day By
Pablo Nerudain Famous Love Poems
-
37
My Wife By
Andre’ Cardenas
Love Poem From Husband Feeling Blessed
in Wife Poems
-
38
My Promise To My Soldier By
Danielle Mia
in Boyfriend Poems
-
39
I Know You By
Katie
When I First Met You — A Love Poem For Him
in Boyfriend Poems
-
40
My Dearest Love By
Sherri Brown
Love Forever Poem To Husband In Prison
in Long Distance Poems
-
41
My Promise To You By
Emily Thurston
in Boyfriend Poems
-
42
My Blessing In Life By
Jessica L. Newsome
Poem For Husband From Wife
in Husband Poems
-
43
When Love Begins By
Florence
in Falling in Love Poems
-
44
My One, My Only, My Everything By
D Lancaster
Love Finds A Way
in True Love Poems
-
45
Take Me Back By
Katie
Having Regrets After Ending A Relationship
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
46
A Good Woman By
Carol Naumann
Poem About How To Treat Your Wife
in Wife Poems
-
47
Sorry By
Whitestar
Apology Poem
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
48
I Love You By
Shannon
Short I Love You Poem
in Short Love Poems
-
49
I Love You By
Dave Lawrie
Unbounded Love: A Poem Of Falling For A Friend
in Poems for Her
-
50
My Angel, My Girlfriend By
Rick Morley
in Poems for Her
-
51
A Toast To Forever By
Josh Mertens
in Poems for Her
-
52
A Wife’s Desire By
Marybeth Rausch
Wife’s Love And Need For Her Husband
in Husband Poems
-
53
I’m Sorry By
Rebecca H.
Forever And Always: A Poem Of Love And Apology
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
54
Sun And Moon By
Del Kayler
We Will Always Be Connected To Each Other
in Long Distance Poems
-
55
Our Greatest Love By
Elaine Chetty
My One And Only
in True Love Poems
-
56
In Your Arms By
Kaylee
in Passionate Love Poems
-
57
Someone By
Owain L. Derbyshire
Your Love Has Changed Me
in Long Distance Poems
-
58
God’s Gift By
John P. Read
in Short Love Poems
-
59
Every Time You Say I Love You By
Shelagh Bullman
in I Love You Poems
-
60
How Are We? By
Timbo318
Changes In A Relationship
in Confused about Love Poems
-
61
I Am Sorry By
Leon Weate
I’m Sorry Poem From Husband To Wife
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
62
Remember When By
Marcia A. Newton
Remembering And Rekindling Love
in Relationship Poems
-
63
What She Is To Me By
Darren C Swartland
Her Beauty
in Romantic Poems
-
64
You’re My Everything By
Jetem Westbrook
in Boyfriend Poems
-
65
Life With You By
Greg Thung
Poem To My Sweetheart Who Has Changed My Life
in Sweet Love Poems
-
66
You Are My Sunshine By
Donna Donathan
in Sweet Love Poems
-
67
My Promise By
Amanda R. Stroope
Poem About My Promise To Love You Forever
in I Love You Poems
-
68
Trials By
Frank Mandarano
Overcoming Hardship Makes A Relationship Stronger
in Relationship Poems
-
69
Blinded By Love By
Shanna
in Boyfriend Poems
-
70
You By
Sabrina
How I Feel About You Poem
in I Love You Poems
-
71
Let Go By
Shelby T. Parsons
Poem About Falling In Love And Letting Go
in Moving On Poems
-
72
Love Me By
Samantha A. Kemmerer
Poem Asking Boyfriend To Be True
in Boyfriend Poems
-
73
Thinking Of You By
Persiah
Thinking About The Person You Love Poem
in I Love You Poems
-
74
Our Love By
John P. Read
Short Acrostic Love Poem
in Short Love Poems
-
75
Remember That By
Sara Stout
I Will Always Love You
in I Love You Poems
-
76
I’m Sorry By
Casey Lee Watson
Poem About Taking Out Anger On Another Person
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
77
My Love By
Megan Hagen
Falling For You
in Falling in Love Poems
-
78
I Love You By
Adrian Jackson
Poem For Girlfriend Love Forever
in Poems for Her
-
79
All I Need By
Asher C. Childress
Unconditional Love Poem For Girlfriend
in Falling in Love Poems
-
80
My Heart To You By
Alan
The Way You Make Me Feel Poem
in Short Love Poems
-
81
From The Day I Met You By
Sophie L. Bracegirdle
Since I Met You Poem
in Boyfriend Poems
-
82
I Love You So Much By
Eric D»Amico
You Are My Heart And Soul
in I Love You Poems
-
83
My Only Love By
Sheri Medina
Poem About My One And Only True Love
in True Love Poems
-
84
One Last Chance By
Jacob Greenberg
Saying I’m Sorry
in I’m Sorry Love Poems
-
85
Happy In Love By
Shelagh Bullman
in Falling in Love Poems
-
86
My True Love By
Hailey L. Sturgill
in Romantic Poems
-
87
Forever Connected By
Silke Wettergren
We Were Meant To Be Together Poem
in True Love Poems
-
88
You By
Bryce Jennings
Love Poem To Girlfriend
in Poems for Her
-
89
Life Without You By
Nikki Wilfong
in Boyfriend Poems
-
90
God’s Plan By
Antoinette McDonald
Love Forever
in I Love You Poems
-
91
Colours Of Romance By
Randy Batiquin
Painting Love With Words
in Falling in Love Poems
-
92
One Day By
Shaydee A. Ault
One Day He’ll Miss You
in Moving On Poems
-
93
How Can You See Through Me? By
Robert Vincent
Forbidden Love
in Confused about Love Poems
-
94
I Love Your Smile By
Ronald Doe
in Sweet Love Poems
-
95
I Love You By
Samiul Zubair
You Changed My View On Love
in Poems for Her
-
96
Dream Keeper By
Stephanie Schiavone
in Sweet Love Poems
-
97
A Thought True To You By
Sean Raine
You’re My World
in Poems for Her
-
98
You, My Wife, My Treasure By
Danny Blackburn
Love Poem For Wife
in Wife Poems
-
99
I Love You By
Harry Boslem
The Way You Make Me Feel Poem
in Wife Poems
-
100
You’re My Forever By
Jim Contarino
in Love Poems about Marriage
Back to Top
The copyright of all poems on this website belong to the individual authors.
All other content on this website is Copyright © 2006 — 2023 FFP Inc. All rights reserved.
Love Poems
Rhyming and Free Verse Love Poetry
Free love poems and verses for romantic love messages and notes. Short, long, sad, teen, relationship love poetry, more. Find the words of love you’re looking for right here.
Never Like This
I’ve held others before,
But it was never like this,
Where my body inhales you
And quivers with bliss,
Where my senses are reeling
From the strength of desire,
And if I can’t have you soon,
I’ll be consumed by the fire.
By Karl Fuchs
Love poetry should make the recipient feel treasured. This free rhyming romantic true love poem is a love rhyme that could also be used as a relationship poem.
If Not For You
If not for you, I wouldn’t know
What true love really meant.
I’d never feel this inner peace;
I couldn’t be content.
If not for you, I’d never have
The pleasures of romance.
I’d miss the bliss, the craziness,
Of love’s sweet, silly dance.
I have to feel your tender touch;
I have to hear your voice;
No other one could take your place;
You’re it; I have no choice.
If not for you, I’d be adrift;
I don’t know what I’d do;
I’d be searching for my other half,
Incomplete, if not for you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can describe a fulfilling relationship. This love verse does that. You can attach this to a romantic gift or put it in your own love card.
My Everything
Bonded to you in emotional bliss,
united in physical rapture,
I realize my dreams and fantasies.
Engulfed in contentment
and satisfaction,
I know heaven in your arms.
My intense hunger nourished,
deep yearnings fulfilled,
I am open to you in total trust.
You are my refuge,
my everything
By Joanna Fuchs
To view ALL our poem pages, see our SITE MAP
Author’s Choice
Some years ago, when I thought about starting a poetry site, I prayed about it. «Lord,» I said, «I’m about to write a poem, and if you want me to go ahead with this poetry site idea, make it a really good one.» I started writing, and in a short time, «Creatures of the Fire» was done. I looked at it and just knew I had the go ahead from God. Technically, it’s the best poem I’ve ever written, with its internal rhyme and metaphors. I loved it then, and it’s still my favorite.
Creatures of the Fire
We swan-dive into the volcano, burning;
We’re creatures of the fire,
Mingled male and female, yearning
For the heat, the sweet explosion of desire.
I splash into the pleasure, all consuming;
I’m joyfully insane,
My passion for you deep, and fully blooming;
Long after, sweet warm flickers still remain.
You make my body sizzle with your kisses,
And yet there’s so much more;
My heart is kindled, too; It knows what bliss is,
This closeness that I’ve never felt before.
My body and my heart belong to you;
I’m peaceful and complete.
I see more adventures coming for we two,
We creatures of the tender fire and heat.
By Joanna Fuchs
Before using our poems please see our
Terms of Use
for permission details.
See Our Other Pages of Love Poems
We have SIX pages of love poems,
this page and the following five others.
Short Love Poems
Sad Love Poems
Anniversary Love Poems
Birthday Love Poems
Valentine Love Poems
See some Christmas Love Poems here.
Some love poems rhyme and some don’t. This is a love message in free verse, which doesn’t rhyme. This free love verse could also be framed and given as a romantic gift.
Until I Met You
Before I met you,
I thought I was happy,
and I was,
but I had never known
the rich contentment,
deep satisfaction,
and total fulfillment
you brought to me
when you came into my life.
Before I met you,
I felt a lot of things,
good things,
but I had never experienced
the indescribably intense
feelings I have for you.
Before I met you,
I thought I knew myself,
and I did,
but you looked deep inside me
and found fresh new things
for us to share.
Before I met you,
I thought I knew about love,
but I didn’t,
until I met you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can use imagery, as this romantic poem does in its references to nature.
A Love Song
Let me sing you a love song
About what I feel in my heart;
Butterflies can’t find nectar
Whenever we’re apart.
You’re a flower in bloom.
In the dark, in the gloom,
It’s you who brightens my day.
How many ways do I need you?
Every day, every way, come what may.
By Karl Fuchs
Love rhymes can list what one person loves about the other. Joanna wrote this why I love you poem for Karl for Valentine’s Day 2006. This love verse could be printed, framed, and given as a romantic gift.
Reasons Why
Our love is the long lasting kind;
We’ve been together quite awhile.
I love you for so many things,
Your voice, your touch, your kiss, your smile.
You accept me as I am;
I can relax and just be me.
Even when my quirks come out,
You think they’re cute; you let me be.
With you, there’s nothing to resist;
You’re irresistible to me.
I’m drawn to you in total trust;
I give myself to you willingly.
Your sweet devotion never fails;
You view me with a patient heart.
You love me, dear, no matter what.
You’ve been that way right from the start.
Those are just a few reasons why
I’ll always love you like I do.
We’ll have a lifetime full of love,
And it will happen because of you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Some love poetry is specific to gender, as this man to woman love poem is.
One In A Million
You’re one in a million, my most special one;
Your radiant smile is as bright as the sun;
You’re smart and caring and have many great charms,
And my heart really sings when you’re wrapped in my arms.
I’m happy you chose me from all of the rest,
And I’m proud ’cause I know that I got the best.
You’re so cute and sweet, and you glow like a pearl;
I just love you so much, my most wonderful girl!
By Karl Fuchs
Here’s a free verse love poem that attempts to describe feelings of longing when lovers are apart. Of course, you can change the color of eyes to whatever you want…brown, gray, green, etc.
Come to Me
When you’re away from me
I long for you…
in my thoughts,
in the center of my soul.
I yearn to see
the affection in your eyes…
blue depths of love for me.
I crave the safe warmth
of your arms around me…
my cave of comfort, ease and peace.
My body aches with hunger for you…
the exquisite torture
of delayed ecstasy,
coming soon, coming soon.
I long for you, I yearn for you,
I ache for you…
Please, bring all that I crave
in your incomparable self.
Come to me. Come to me.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poems are usually written by people who are happy in their relationships—at least the happy love poems are! Here’s a love poem from one very happy partner to another. This is perfect for a romantic card or to accompany a romantic gift.
Safe Within Our Love
How did this miracle happen
That we’re so very blessed,
So close…and more contented,
Than I ever would have guessed.
I never thought that I
Could spend each precious minute
With just one special person
And find happiness within it.
I’ve learned so much from you
About loving, sharing, giving;
I know if I hadn’t met you,
I wouldn’t be really living.
We’re facing life together;
We’re handling joy and sorrow;
I’m glad you’re on my side,
Whatever comes tomorrow.
You’re my perfect partner,
Sweet lover, trusted friend.
We’re safe within our love,
A love that will never end.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry often describes the good qualities of the loved one, as this love verse does. This I love you poem is in free verse; that is, it doesn’t rhyme.
All The Things I Love About You
I love you for the warm, sweet affection
in your eyes
whenever you look at me,
and the special smile
you save only for me.
I love that you always seek
to have your body close to mine,
reaching out to touch,
to hold my hand,
to wrap your arms around me.
I love how you show me you care
by looking for ways
to make my life easier and more comfortable.
I love that when I ask you to do things,
you try to do them
instead of thinking me demanding.
I love that your favorite place is near me,
that you’d rather be with me
than anywhere else.
I love you for more reasons
than this page has space to write,
so I’ll try to tell you and show you in person
all the things I love about you.
By Joanna Fuchs
This love poetry describes unconditional love, the kind we’d all like to have. It’s a love verse describing true love that never fails. Joanna wrote this romantic poem for Karl on his birthday in 2008. It could be a love poem for a boyfriend or a love poem for a husband, or any kind of love poem for him.
You Just Keep On Loving Me
No matter what I look like,
Whether pretty or plain you see,
When I’m all dressed up or in PJs,
You just keep on loving me.
Sometimes I’m happy and cheerful;
Other times grumpy and sad;
Your absolute love never wavers,
Whether I’m grouchy or glad.
Sometimes I try to change you;
And sometimes I criticize;
But I feel something melting within me,
When I see all the love in your eyes.
Your tolerance is endless,
However I choose to be;
Having my love makes you happy,
So you just keep on loving me.
And that is why, my darling,
Whatever else I do,
One thing is sure; no matter what,
I’ll just keep on loving you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can imply the erotic, as this love message does.
Like You
I had many loves before I met you,
interesting loves,
companionable, fun-loving,
comfortable loves,
but only one real love, unique love…
like you.
No one made my heart pound,
my skin damp, everything juicy
through and through…
like you.
None left me breathless,
panting with excitement,
satisfaction, and finally peace,
like you.
Before you, there were others,
but none captured
my mind, heart and soul forever…
like you.
By Joanna Fuchs
No One Loves Me Like You Do
No one loves me like you do;
I’ve never felt like this;
You please me in so many ways,
With a word, a caress, a kiss.
No one understands me like you do;
You see me deep inside,
You choose to overlook my flaws,
The ones I try to hide.
No one satisfies me like you do,
When our bodies intertwine;
You give so much with your tender touch,
You’re amazing, and you’re mine!
No one loves me like you do;
You fill my every need,
And that is why, my darling,
I’ll follow wherever you lead.
By Joanna Fuchs
People who are looking for love sayings want to say what they feel but don’t know what words to use. I hope this love message meets that need.
Always
I always yearn to come to you,
be with you,
connect with you,
unite with you,
merge with you.
I always love to nurture you,
nourish you,
meet your needs,
feed your hungers.
I will always cherish you,
treasure you,
adore you.
I aways want to be yours,
always.
By Joanna Fuchs
Romantic love poetry often centers on obsessive thoughts of the loved one as this free romantic love poem does. It could also be called a falling in love poem.
I Think Of You
When I think of you, you fill my mind;
There’s no more thinking room I find.
I’ve never had such thoughts before;
I’m lost in you, whom I adore.
I think no more of mundane things,
Like common pleasures that living brings.
I just think of you, and I’m filled with dreams;
To keep your love fills all my schemes.
By Karl Fuchs
Your Love
Your love is
a magical gift,
a wondrous miracle,
my greatest treasure.
Your love creates in me
peace, contentment,
ecstasy and bliss.
Your love gives me
feelings of safety, stability
emotional security.
You are the best thing
that ever happened to me,
amazing love of my life.
By Joanna Fuchs
This free verse love poem is dedicated to faithful, neverending love that survives, no matter what.
Your Love Lasts
We’ve been together
through chaotic and difficult times.
At times I lost me,
but I never lost you,
because you were always
right by my side.
Your love lasts.
Fatigued, depressed and overwhelmed
about what was happening,
I always had your love
as my one good thing.
Your love lasts.
Irritated, angry, overwhelmed,
I still had you,
understanding, forgiving.
Your love kept me alive,
and made me whole once again.
Your love lasts.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can describe how the loved one fulfills long-held dreams. This free rhyming love poem does that.
A Dream Fulfilled
How could anyone ever know,
The sweet dreams that I dreamt as a youth,
Could blossom and focus and grow,
Until now they’d turn up as a truth.
A truth filled with blessing and wonder,
A truth filled with love and with caring,
A truth with a voice loud as thunder,
A truth with a message worth sharing.
For you, my love, filled all my dreams,
Of a life I thought never could be.
Now with you at my side, I’m contented;
For my dreaming came true, don’t you see?
I never gave up on my dreaming,
I persisted because I just knew,
A wait for real love is worth waiting,
Now you’re here, and my dreams have come true.
By Karl Fuchs
For all you men whose women tell you that you never say what they want to hear, this free verse love poem is for you.
I’m Writing It Down
Sometimes a man’s mind and tongue
seem disconnected.
My mind realizes your wonderfulness,
but my tongue might fail to tell you.
Maybe, since my eyes and brain
see how very obvious
your lovely, endearing qualities are,
my tongue thinks
I don’t need to let you know.
In case there is any doubt
about what I am thinking and feeling,
I am writing it down for you:
I always think
you are the prettiest, smartest,
most wonderful, kindest,
most loveable girl
in all the world.
I want to hug, kiss, love
and adore you forever.
Please try to have patience
with the negligence of my tongue.
I am working to keep it in the loop better.
By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
New Love
I’ve fought so many things in life,
Mental, emotional, physical strife.
With you, only harmony and peace I find.
Happiness, contentment fill my mind.
With so much love, there’s just no room
For conflict or for doom and gloom.
Rapture, ecstasy and bliss
Is what I feel each time we kiss.
It’s wonderful and totally new;
I’m deeply, madly in love with you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can use the beauty of nature to convey tender feelings as this free online love poem does.
Beautiful
My thoughts of you are like raindrops on flowers…
Beautiful.
My thoughts of you are like a rainbow at a splashing waterfall…
Beautiful.
My thoughts of you are like a full moon
shining through a cloudy night sky…
Beautiful.
No matter what wonders my eyes have seen,
Nothing compares to the beauty I see
when I look at you.
My love for you is beautiful.
By Karl Fuchs
Love poetry can include love messages that talk about the search for Mr. or Ms. Right, as this sweet love poem does.
Lucky
We all are explorers on the great sea of life;
We search and we hunt for our pleasure.
Some adventures are fruitful, and some disappoint,
But few find a gem they can treasure.
I’m so blessed I found you as my priceless prize;
You’re a treasure in every way.
I searched with the rest and discovered the best;
Finding you was my luckiest day.
By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
Love poetry can acknowledge how strong the bonds of love can be. This love rhyme makes that clear.
The Prisoner
What is it about you that makes me feel weak,
And gives me the goose bumps whenever you speak?
Why does the sight of you fill me with pleasure,
Like a spotlight that shines on a glorious treasure?
Are you so different from others I’ve known?
What qualities do you have that are yours alone?
What can it be that fills up my heart?
And makes me feel lost whenever we part?
There’s no easy answer for this marvelous bliss,
For the wonder I feel whenever we kiss,
For the fire that rages at the touch of your skin,
For the way my heart pounds for you way deep within.
It must be the power of love that I feel,
That ties me in bonds that seem strong as steel.
I could fight to get loose, but I’d rather give in;
To stay trapped by your charms is how I will win.
By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
Love messages can appreciate a specific quality of the loved one, as this free love poem appreciates unconditional love. It also qualifies as a relationship poem.
You Let Me Be Me
While others tell me I have faults and flaws,
And pick me all apart and criticize,
You love me, sweetheart, just the way I am;
I only see affection in your eyes.
My pesky quirks you only find endearing;
Your perfect mate is what you choose to see;
I love you for a multitude of reasons;
And most of all ’cause you let me be me.
I never have to change to meet your standards;
Acceptance is the greatest gift you give;
I appreciate you for your sweet devotion,
And I’ll love you for as long as we shall live.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love messages can be custom tailored to the recipient. Joanna has strawberry blonde hair, so Karl wrote it this way, but this romantic love poem will fit any woman. Change «reddish» to «golden» or «raven» (black) or «chestnut» (brown).
My Girl with the Reddish Hair
Pirates bold in days of old
Searched the world for treasure rare,
But none they found as bright and sound,
As my girl with the reddish hair.
Precious gold and sparkling jewels
Were fortunes to make men care,
But none were worth a penny
Next to my girl with the reddish hair.
These pirates fought and died for wealth;
Their lives I wouldn’t share,
For I have the only wealth I need:
My girl with the reddish hair.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love messages can convey a «before you» and «after you» state of mind. This love poem in free verse (it doesn’t rhyme) describes a person whose self knowledge may have been faulty.
Because of You
I was self sufficient,
gratified by my independence,
alone, but not lonely,
I thought.
But I was restless,
searching blindly for something
to fill an empty place
I didn’t even know I had,
dimly aware
that I was somehow unfinished.
Then you came,
and filled everything,
every space, every need,
even secret dreams
I had concealed from myself.
I was self sufficient,
and restless;
Now I am profoundly peaceful
and complete,
because of you.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love messages can contain detailed description, metaphors, even stories. This cute love poem includes fantasy as well.
The Wizard
There’s a story told of a wizard
Who, for money, would cast a spell,
And I’m sure that you met this wizard,
And you, his wares he did sell.
What else can explain how your smile
Can make my heartbeat roar,
Or how your look slows my breathing,
While causing my spirits to soar.
I’m sure that you and this wizard
Conspired to control my brain,
For I’m always thinking about you—
Feeling happy and slightly insane.
Now I hope I meet that same wizard,
For I’d give him all of my gold,
To make you want to stay with me,
And share happiness as we grow old.
By Karl Fuchs
Love poetry can tell a story. Here’s a love message from someone who’s had some rough relationships, but finally found his dream partner.
The Dream Road
I’ve had a dream, since I was young
Of just how life should be,
But through the years, try as I might,
That dream eluded me.
I dreamed of a life that was filled with bliss;
I dreamed of love and sharing.
I dreamed, imagined and creatively planned
An adventure for two who were caring.
The road to today was paved with the dreams
That slowly got ground to dust.
And I’ve trudged that road and carried my load
And tried very hard to adjust.
Each step made me stronger; each test made me wiser,
So on my long walk, I grew,
Till the time was right, one magical night,
For the road to make room for two.
Now my brain shouts your name, and your loving reply
Makes a place for you in my heart.
(Name), it cries—so tender, so wise—
Let’s make the adventure start!
Together we’re blessed with a perfect match,
Something that’s bright and new.
It’s not too late, so let’s create
A life that makes dreams come true.
By Karl Fuchs
Love poetry expresses the all-encompassing nature of love. This free romantic love poem describes how the loved on is always on your mind.
Daydreams
My thoughts of you come frequently;
They’re always filled with you and me.
No matter what I see or when,
It brings you back to mind again.
I’d be sitting, reading a book,
Or be out walking by a brook;
No matter what the path I took,
I’d see dream images of how you look.
Each day is filled with dreams of you;
I hope that all these dreams come true.
By Karl Fuchs
Love poetry can describe some of the craziness that love brings with it, as this free romantic love poem does.
Beware
When love strikes us hard and makes mush of our brain,
When love sneaks in and makes us insane,
All sense can depart and leave the brain blank,
When love like that strikes it can drain our whole tank.
So beware of the power you exert over me,
For I’m under your spell; that’s clear as can be.
Whenever you’re near, my brain slips out of joint;
I fight my love, but what is the point?
You’re my strength and my weakness, for I love you so dearly,
And I hope our love shines through the years just as clearly.
By Karl Fuchs
Perfect For Me
How do you do it day after day,
Staying perfect for me in every way,
But do it you do, so I can’t complain;
You put up with me, even when I’m a pain.
Problems arise, and solutions get tried;
Through it all, you are always right there by my side.
Your caring for me is a gift without measure;
Your passion and strength make our union a treasure.
Though parts of us fail as we get older,
There are parts that get better and make our love bolder.
Your love and devotion make my life shine,
So I hope that forever you will be mine.
By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
Karl wrote this love poem for red-haired Joanna.
Wondrous Whirl
We’ve known each other quite a while,
Yet days spent with you still make me smile.
The sun shines brighter when you’re near;
You’ve brightened my life through every year.
There are some times when we disagree,
When angry thoughts fill you and me.
But angry thoughts just don’t last long,
For the love we share is way too strong.
I thank the Lord that we did meet,
And I partnered up with you, my sweet.
It’s hard to think of a better mate,
Life with you, for me, is great!
So let’s keep going in this wondrous whirl,
I’ll always love my little red haired girl!
By Karl Fuchs
Love Poems for a Wife
Karl wrote this love poem for Joanna’s birthday in 2014.
A Love Poem for My Wife
You’re the love of my life, my sweet, wonderful wife,
And that’s what you’ll always be.
I can hardly believe the good fortune I’ve had
Through the years since you married me.
Each year spent with you is a blessing; it’s true!
Each year brings contentment so rare;
Each year binds us stronger and deeper in love,
and my wish is for more years to share!
By Karl Fuchs
This love poem has a «forever» quality about it. It’s about soulmates, the perfect team.
Partner for Life
My partner for life is you, my sweet wife;
I feel the bright joy you provide.
You fill life with pleasure;
You’re my very own treasure;
Without you, I’d be empty inside.
Let’s cherish the good times, learn from the bad,
Make the most of the life we share
If things get you down, don’t worry; don’t frown.
Always remember, I care!
By Karl Fuchs
Love Poem for a Deceased Wife
I guess you could call this love poem a short tribute to my deceased wife.
A Love Poem for My Late Wife
My beloved wife,
You’re the love of my life.
Now that you’re gone,
Your sweet memory lives on.
Thoughts of you light my way,
Brightening each day.
We’ll never really part;
You’re so deep in my heart.
I’m yours and you’re mine,
Till the end of time.
By Joanna Fuchs
There are many searches for a Love Poem for a Deceased Husband, so I wrote one.
You’re Gone
You’re gone,
but you’re giving me love
in sweet memories.
You’re gone,
and I recall how you filled up my life
with contentment, romance and laughter.
You’re gone, but not really.
Love of my life, you gave me
lasting emotional security,
because your love is always with me.
So you see, my darling,
You’re not gone.
You’re here, with me,
in my heart and mind,
and you always will be.
I’ll see you again on the other side.
By Joanna Fuchs
Teen Love Poems
Teen love poems should address common experiences, like unrequited love, as this teenage love poem does.
Invisible
I see you at school
And you glance my way,
Passing in the halls
In your ordinary day.
But anytime
Your eyes meet mine
Is a day so rare,
A day so fine.
Just another face,
I’m nothing to you;
You look but don’t see;
You haven’t a clue…
That my heart is racing;
I’m trembling inside;
So much love for you
I’m trying to hide.
You smile at others;
You pass me by;
I’m invisible,
And I want to cry.
By Joanna Fuchs
Teen love poems often talk about how one person wishes another would think of them as more than a friend, as this teenage love poem does.
Just Friends?
You say that you like me,
But that we’re just friends;
Can I feel the same?
Well I think it depends:
Can I quit breathing fast
Each time you appear?
Will my heart stop its pounding
Whenever you’re near?
I’d like to feel nothing,
And get rid of the thrill.
I wish I’d stop loving you,
But I don’t think I will.
By Joanna Fuchs
Love Prayer
It’s pretty amazing how many searches there are for a love prayer, so here’s a romantic prayer that I hope meets those needs.
Love prayer
I pray the Lord will bless you, Love,
With all that’s good from heaven above.
Lord, please keep him well, secure;
Create in us a love that’s pure,
Unselfish, giving, fond and true,
Fixed on loving and serving You.
By Joanna Fuchs
Curious about the Christian religion? What is Christianity?
What is a Christian? What is Christian faith?
To see the answers and find out how to become a Christian,
check out this Web site.
Relationship Poems
Love poems can also be relationship poems, as this love verse is.
Love Can Stay Strong
When love first comes and all seems right;
It’s beyond our reason that we two can fight.
Yet fights will come, and anger might thrive,
So let’s try to be sure that our love will survive.
Let’s make our plans with similar goals,
So our wants and desires won’t hit hidden shoals
That set us crashing when things get hard,
So our love can stay strong even when it gets jarred.
For if love can stay strong when it’s tested by fire,
Then we’d share a future that most would admire,
A future where partners would strive side by side,
A future where love would always abide.
By Karl and Joanna Fuchs
This love poem is actually a relationship poem with an important message.
The Lover’s Quarrel
For many years we’ve lived and loved,
Our lives a rich delight.
Then one day’s events caused us to clash,
And the friction led to a fight.
You think that words can’t do a lot,
But words are not inert.
Words have the power to sooth and calm,
But can also cut and hurt.
If thoughts are kept within your head,
They can be dealt with by you alone.
But once the words are past your lips,
They’re like a monument carved in stone.
So always take the time to think,
Of the hurt that can take place,
Whenever a thought is hastily said,
To cause someone loss of face.
It’s hard work to tear the monument down,
To make the hurtful words lose their power.
It’s so much better not to speak the thought,
And just complain to yourself for an hour.
By Karl Fuchs
More Love Poems!
See Our Other Pages of Love Poems
We have SIX pages of love poetry,
this page and the following five others.
Short Love Poems
Sad Love Poems
Anniversary Love Poems
Birthday Love Poems
Thanks for reading our love poems! This love poetry is free for use on personal greeting cards, provided that the author’s name (Joanna Fuchs or Karl Fuchs) and our Web site address, www.poemsource.com, appear beneath the poem. (It can be small print; just so it’s readable.) All other uses require permission. See our Terms of Use for details.
Submit Your Own Love Message, Poem or Note
Share with the world your feelings of affection, attraction or passion in your original love poem. Give your loved one a link to your love message so it can be viewed online.
Please note: YOUR ORIGINAL WORK ONLY, posted only at Poemsource.com. Please DO NOT submit the work of someone else. Minimum 100 words; more is better, no limit. If your poem or message is too short, please add comments. Submissions are subject to approval and editing.
Love Messages and Poems
from Other Visitors
Click below to see love verses from other visitors to this page…
Love Messages from the Heart
This rhyming poem contains a love message every lover would like to hear.
You’re the center of my dream,
A safe harbor in the storm.
Of the crop, you’re …
Click here to write your own.
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Tuesday, Sep 14
There’s nothing quite so moving as beautiful love poems. Luckily for us romantics, they’ve been in abundant supply throughout history! From Rumi in the Islamic Golden Age, to iconic playwright William Shakespeare, to modern-day “Instapoets” like Rupi Kaur, love has been one of the most-explored themes among writers and poets for centuries.
In this post, we’ve put together the 65 most beautiful love poems ever written. Whether you’re looking for something to share with your partner, seeking solace after a breakup, or craving inspiration for how to write your own passionate prose, there’s bound to be a poem on this list which speaks to your heart.
Wondering which love poem you are? Take our 30-second quiz to find out.
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1. “Come, And Be My Baby” by Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou was one of America’s most acclaimed poets and storytellers, as well as a celebrated educator and civil rights activist. In ‘Come, And Be My Baby’, Angelou beautifully captures how overwhelming modern life can be and the comfort that love can provide during times of hardship — even if only for a moment.
2. «Bird-Understander» by Craig Arnold
These are your own words
your way of noticing
and saying plainly
of not turning away
from hurt
you have offered them
to me I am only
giving them back
if only I could show you
how very useless
they are not
The raw honesty of Craig Arnold’s poetry makes ‘Bird-Understander’ an easy pick for our list of the most beautiful love poems. In this piece, Arnold recounts a moment with his partner that makes his love grow even stronger. The language is simple yet evocative, putting a strong metaphor in the reader’s mind and facilitating a deeper understanding of Arnold’s feelings.
3. «Habitation» by Margaret Atwood
at the back where we squat
outside, eating popcorn
the edge of the receding glacier
where painfully and with wonder
at having survived even
this far
we are learning to make fire
Best known for her alarmingly realistic dystopian novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood demonstrates similar strengths in this poem: ‘Habitation’ is strikingly real. For context, Atwood here admits to the challenges of marriage and acknowledges the work needed to overcome them. It is this candor which makes the poem so beautiful.
4. «Variations on the Word Love» by Margaret Atwood
One of the most fascinating things about love is that it can come in so many different forms — platonic, passionate, or even patronizing. Margaret Atwood unflinchingly lays out some of these in her poem ‘Variations on the Word Love’.
5. «The More Loving One» by W.H. Auden
Were all stars to disappear or die,
I should learn to look at an empty sky
And feel its total dark sublime,
Though this might take me a little time.
Whilst poems about heartbreak might not be as uplifting as those about the joys of love, they can be equally as beautiful and meaningful. The celestial extended metaphor of W.H. Auden’s ‘The More Loving One’ demonstrates this — though ultimately he would rather be ‘the more loving one’ himself, Auden perfectly encapsulates the pain of loss when love ends.
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6. «To My Dear and Loving Husband» by Anne Bradstreet
Thy love is such I can no way repay;
The heavens reward thee manifold, I pray.
Then while we live, in love let’s so persever,
That when we live no more, we may live ever.
Anne Bradstreet’s Puritan belief that marriage is a gift from God comes across strongly in ‘To My Dear and Loving Husband.’ Reading it through a modern lens, it’s easy to start the poem feeling a little skeptical; however, Bradstreet’s genuine gratitude and dedication to her husband soon manifests to make it a deeply moving assertion of true love.
7. «Always For The First Time» by André Breton
There is a silk ladder unrolled across the ivy
There is
That leaning over the precipice
Of the hopeless fusion of your presence and absence
I have found the secret
Of loving you
Always for the first time
‘Always For The First Time’ is André Breton’s ode to a woman he has not met, but is willing to wait every day for. Breton was the French founder of the surrealist movement, which aimed to blur the lines between dreams and reality in art — explaining the rather whimsical nature of this beautiful love poem.
8. «Love and Friendship» by Emily Brontë
Love doesn’t have to be confined to romance — love between friends can be just as strong and beautiful. In ‘Love and Friendship’, Emily Brontë compares romantic love to a rose — stunning but short-lived — and friendship to a holly tree which can endure all seasons.
9. «To Be In Love» by Gwendolyn Brooks
Next on our list of the most beautiful poems about love is ‘To Be in Love’ by Gwendolyn Brooks. Brooks was a poet, author, and teacher — and perhaps most notably, in 1950, was also the first African-American writer to receive a Pulitzer Prize. In this powerful poem, Brooks conveys the intense emotions which come with falling in love and how it can change your entire outlook on life.
To be in love
Is to touch with a lighter hand.
In yourself you stretch, you are well.
10. «How Do I Love Thee? (Sonnet 43)» by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of being and ideal grace.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning was a renowned Victorian poet who influenced the work of many later English-language poets, including Emily Dickinson. ‘How Do I Love Thee?’ is one of Browning’s most recognizable poems, and indeed one of the most famous love poems ever written — its ardent yet clear declaration of love has resonated with readers for over 150 years.
11. «A Red, Red Rose» by Robert Burns
Similar to Browning, Robert Burns’ profound love is evident in his poem ‘A Red, Red Rose’. Burns declares this love to be both passionate and refreshing — with each comparison, we see that even the loveliest language pales next to the depth of Burns’ ‘Luve’.
12. «She Walks in Beauty» by Lord Byron
She walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
And all that’s best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes;
Thus mellowed to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies.
Though its author was known for a life of adventure and scandal, Lord Byron’s poem ‘She Walks in Beauty’ refers notably less to passionate or sexual love compared to his other works. That said, his astonishment at this woman’s beauty comes across instantly, making this a beautifully romantic poem.
13. «Love is a fire that burns unseen» by Luís Vaz de Camões
Love is a fire that burns unseen,
a wound that aches yet isn’t felt,
an always discontent contentment,
a pain that rages without hurting,
One of Portugal’s greatest poets, Luís Vaz de Camões is known for his lyrical poetry and dramatic epics. ‘Love is a fire that burns unseen’ is an example of the former, reflecting his numerous turbulent love affairs and how each brought a complex fusion of pleasure and pain.
14. «Beautiful Signor» by Cyrus Cassells
This is the endless wanderlust:
dervish,
yours is the April-upon-April love
that kept me spinning even beyond your eventful arms
toward the unsurpassed:
the one vast claiming heart,
the glimmering,
the beautiful and revealed Signor.
‘Beautiful Signor’ is an entry from Cyrus Cassells’ poetry collection of the same name, which he dedicated to ‘Lovers everywhere’. Culturally set against the backdrop of the AIDS epidemic, the collection aims to remind people of the potent beauty of romantic love.
15. «Rondel of Merciless Beauty» by Geoffrey Chaucer
Upon my word, I tell you faithfully
Through life and after death you are my queen;
For with my death the whole truth shall be seen.
Your two great eyes will slay me suddenly;
Their beauty shakes me who was once serene;
Straight through my heart the wound is quick and keen.
Widely regarded as the ‘Father of English poetry’, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote some of the most renowned works of the English language, including ‘The Canterbury Tales’ and ‘The Book of the Duchess’. The standalone poem ‘Rondel of Merciless Beauty’ (here translated from Middle English) recounts Chaucer’s heartbreak after being left by the love of his life, pledging his everlasting devotion to her even though it pains him.
16. «Love Comes Quietly» by Robert Creeley
Robert Creeley’s short but striking love poem aptly summarizes the feeling of never wanting to be apart from the person you love, almost making you forget what life was like before you met them.
17. «[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]» by E. E. Cummings
i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
As one of America’s most prolific twentieth century poets, E.E. Cummings needs no introduction. Many of his poems centered around love and ‘[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]’ is perhaps the best-known of them all. The rich imagery and intimate infatuation earns it a prominent spot on our list of the most beautiful love poems ever written.
18. «[love is more thicker than forget]» by E.E. Cummings
love is more thicker than forget
more thinner than recall
more seldom than a wave is wet
more frequent than to fail
Another brilliant example of Cummings’ love poetry is [love is more thicker than forget]. This poem explores the complexity of love, expressing that it cannot simply be defined as one thing or another — and indeed, painting love as a paradox of rarity and frequency, modesty and profundity, sanity and madness, and much more.
19. «Sthandwa sami (my beloved, isiZulu)» by Yrsa Daley-Ward
my thoughts about you are frightening but precise
I can see the house on the hill where we make our own vegetables out back
and drink warm wine out of jam jars
and sing songs in the kitchen until the sun comes up
wena you make me feel like myself again.
Yrsa Daley-Ward’s ‘Sthandwa sami (my beloved, isiZulu)’ is one of the most personal and revealing accounts of love on this list. The poem comes from her collection bone, which tackles some of the deepest aspects of humanity, including religion, desire, womanhood, race, and vulnerability.
20. «Married Love» by Guan Daosheng
You and I
Have so much love,
That it
Burns like a fire,
In which we bake a lump of clay
Molded into a figure of you
And a figure of me.
Guan Daosheng was a Chinese painter and poet of the early Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). ‘Married Love’ uses the image of clay figurines to represent two lovers being united as one through the sacred act of marriage, just as clay solidifies in a kiln.
21. «Heart, we will forget him!» by Emily Dickinson
Heart, we will forget him!
You and I, to-night!
You may forget the warmth he gave,
I will forget the light.
‘Heart, we will forget him!’ aligns with the forceful nature of so many Emily Dickinson poems. It is a powerful reflection of the fallout after a passionate love affair and how she tried to move on, going so far as to command her heart to do so, even knowing it’s futile.
22. «Air and Angels» by John Donne
John Donne’s work is known for tackling faith and salvation, as well as both human and divine love. In ‘Angels and Air’, Donne compares his love to the movement of angels — pure and elegant. His conclusion that two lovers can come together and grow stronger adds another layer to this already quite romantic poem.
23. «Flirtation» by Rita Dove
Outside the sun
has rolled up her rugs
and night strewn salt
across the sky. My heart
is humming a tune
I haven’t heard in years!
The sparkling flirtation at the start of a new relationship is surely one of the most exciting parts of love. ‘Flirtation’ by Rita Dove eloquently captures this joy and anticipation, and is one of the most relatable poems about this aspect of love.
24. «Heart to Heart» by Rita Dove
It’s neither red
nor sweet.
It doesn’t melt
or turn over,
break or harden,
so it can’t feel
pain,
yearning,
regret.
In ‘Heart to Heart’, Rita Dove rejects the typical clichés that come with falling in love. With her down-to-earth approach to the topic, she assures the intended reader that although she may struggle to show her love, that doesn’t mean it’s not there.
25. «Love» by Carol Ann Duffy
you’re where I stand, hearing the sea, crazy
for the shore, seeing the moon ache and fret
for the earth. When morning comes, the sun, ardent,
covers the trees in gold, you walk
towards me,
out of the season, out of the light love reasons.
In 2009, Carol Ann Duffy made history when she was appointed the first female and openly lesbian British poet laureate. ‘Love’ is a perfect example of the monologue-style poems she is known for, fitting in with her usual sensory and emotional style of writing; here, she describes love as beautifully boundless, like the light of the sun or the crashing sound of waves.
26. «The Love Poem» by Carol Ann Duffy
‘The Love Poem’ takes a different tack, depicting Duffy’s struggle to find the right words to describe her love. It comes from her 2005 collection Rapture, which charts the speaker’s journey through a love affair; at this stage, Duffy gets metafictional about love poetry, striving to explain the challenges of writing it (and invoking several other famous poems along the way).
27. «Before You Came» by Faiz Ahmed Faiz
Don’t leave now that you’re here—
Stay. So the world may become like itself again:
so the sky may by the sky,
the road a road,
and the glass of wine not a mirror, just a glass of wine.
Faiz Ahmed Faiz wrote of love, politics, and community throughout his tumultuous life, and has been especially acknowledged for his contributions to traditional Urdu poetry. In ‘Before You Came’, Faiz writes about how his perspective on life changed after falling in love and how he never wants to be without his lover, who helps him see things as they truly are.
28. «Lines Depicting Simple Happiness» by Peter Gizzi
It feels right to notice all the shiny things about you
About you there is nothing I wouldn’t want to know
With you nothing is simple yet nothing is simpler
About you many good things come into relation
The beauty in Peter Gizzi’s poetry stems from its simplicity. In ‘Lines Depicting Simple Happiness’, Gizzi’s adoration for his love is clear — however, he avoids overused clichés, meaning the poem is both more personal and less mawkish than other modern love poems.
29. «Six Sonnets: Crossing the West» by Janice Gould
In that communion of lovers, thick sobs
break from me as I think of my love
back home, all that I have done
and cannot say. This is the first time
I have left her so completely, so alone.
Janice Gould’s work homes in on themes of love and connection, with strong links to her identity as a Maidu lesbian. In ‘Six Sonnets: Crossing the West’, Gould equates her lover to a dream, never running short on ethereal ways to describe her… and mourning when she slips away, even temporarily.
30. «For Keeps» by Joy Harjo
Contrasting love with the beauty of nature helps to create an unbreakable bond between the two. This comparison helps illustrate Joy Harjo’s feelings for her lover in her marvelous poem, ‘For Keeps’.
31. «You Are the Penultimate Love of My Life» by Rebecca Hazelton
The garden you plant and I plant
is tunneled through by voles,
the vowels
we speak aren’t vows,
but there’s something
holding me here, for now,
like your eyes, which I suppose
are brown, after all.’
‘You Are the Penultimate Love of My Life’ is an unorthodox love poem, focusing on the realities rather than the fantasies of being in love. Rebecca Hazelton isn’t writing about her soulmate, and she’s aware of that — but that doesn’t make the love they share any less special.
32. «Yours» by Daniel Hoffman
I am yours as the summer air at evening is
Possessed by the scent of linden blossoms,
As the snowcap gleams with light
Lent it by the brimming moon.
Without you I’d be an unleaded tree
Blasted in a bleakness with no Spring.
Daniel Hoffman’s carefully chosen metaphors make ‘Yours’ a truly beautiful love poem. Hoffman’s complete dedication to his lover is obvious — in comparing her to everything from summer evenings to snow-capped mountains, it seems he cannot stop thinking about her throughout the changing seasons.
33. «A Love Song for Lucinda» by Langston Hughes
Love
Is a high mountain
Stark in a windy sky.
If you
Would never lose your breath
Do not climb too high.
Each stanza of Langston Hughes’ ‘A Love Song for Lucinda’ compares love to a specific feeling, all of which are linked to the natural world. This poem emphasizes the exhilaration of falling in love and the all-encompassing enchantment that comes with it.
34. «Poem for My Love» by June Jordan
Political activist, poet, and essayist June Jordan is one of the most widely-published Jamaican American writers of her generation. In her ‘Poem for My Love’, the speaker is in absolute spiritual awe of her partner and the way she feels about their transcendent love.
35. «for him» by Rupi Kaur
no,
it won’t
be love at
first sight when
we meet it’ll be love
at first remembrance
‘cause i’ve recognized you
in my mother’s eyes when she tells me,
marry the type of man you’d want to raise your son to be like.
At just 21 years old, Rupi Kaur wrote, illustrated, and self-published her first poetry collection, milk and honey. She describes her poetry as ‘simple and accessible’ — which has allowed it to reach millions of readers worldwide, particularly through Instagram presence. ‘for him’ is a perfect example of a beautiful, powerful love poem which doesn’t have to try too hard to pack a punch.
36. Untitled by Rupi Kaur
love will hurt you but
love will never mean to
love will play no games
cause love knows life
has been hard enough already
Another entry from milk and honey, this short, untitled poem takes a bittersweet and world weary, but ultimately generous look at love and its challenges.
37. «Poem To An Unnameable Man» by Dorothea Lasky
And I will not cry also
Although you will expect me to
I was wiser too than you had expected
For I knew all along you were mine
Prolific poet Dorothea Lasky has written multiple collections and currently directs the poetry programme at Columbia University. In ‘Poem To An Unnameable Man’, she uses celestial imagery to explore a romantic relationship, describing her power and strength to the lover who underestimates her.
38. «Movement Song» by Audre Lorde
‘Movement Song’ by Audre Lorde is about the end of a relationship. While the sorrow felt after the speaker’s heart has been broken is clear, the poem ultimately ends with hope that the pair can both have a new beginning — albeit apart.
39. «Camomile Tea» by Katherine Mansfield
We might be fifty, we might be five,
So snug, so compact, so wise are we!
Under the kitchen-table leg
My knee is pressing against his knee.
Our shutters are shut, the fire is low,
The tap is dripping peacefully;
The saucepan shadows on the wall
Are black and round and plain to see.
Katherine Mansfield has been praised for her ability to simplify complex emotions through short stories and poetry. One of the more tranquil poems on this list, ‘Camomile Tea’ paints a picture of a couple who are calm and quiet and happy with the life they’ve made for themselves, highlighting the underrated joy that peaceful familiarity and comfort can bring in a relationship.
40. «Love Elegy in the Chinese Garden, with Koi» by Nathan McClain
Because who hasn’t done that —
loved so intently even after everything
has gone? Love something that has washed
its hands of you? I like to think I’m different now,
that I’m enlightened somehow,
but who am I kidding?
Nathan McClain’s inspiration for ‘Love Elegy in the Chinese Garden, with Koi’ was a date to the Huntington Botanical Gardens. In the poem, McClain aimed to ‘explore the sense of anxiety’ between two potential lovers, and the weighty emotional baggage that previous failed relationships can bestow upon you.
41. «I think I should have loved you presently (Sonnet IX)» by Edna St. Vincent Millay
I think I should have loved you presently,
And given in earnest words I flung in jest;
And lifted honest eyes for you to see,
And caught your hand against my cheek and breast;
And all my pretty follies flung aside
That won you to me, and beneath you gaze
Edna St. Vincent Millay’s ‘I think I should have loved you presently’ serves as a subversion of the traditional sonnet form. In the poem, the speaker laments their inability to reciprocate their lover’s earnest affection, instead choosing sweet nothings and superficial flirtation over genuine connection.
42. «Love Sonnet XI» by Pablo Neruda
I crave your mouth, your voice, your hair.
Silent and starving, I prowl through the streets.
Bread does not nourish me, dawn disrupts
me, all day
I hunt for the liquid measure of your steps.
There is a strong sense of longing in Pablo Neruda’s ‘Love Sonnet XI’, as our speaker confesses the thought of his love never leaves his mind, driving him to the point of distraction. Evocative and at times alarming, it’s a love poem which perfectly treads the blurred line between romance and obsession.
43. «Your Feet» by Pablo Neruda
In ‘Your Feet’, Neruda expresses a similar devotion to his love as he explains his love for her from head to toe, and gives thanks for the forces he feels brought them together inevitably.
44. «Dear One Absent This Long While» by Lisa Olstein
I expect you. I thought one night it was you
at the base of the drive, you at the foot of the stairs
you in a shiver of light, but each time
leaves in wind revealed themselves,
the retreating shadow of a fox, daybreak.
We expect you, cat and I, bluebirds and I, the stove.
The speaker in Lisa Olstein’s ‘Dear One Absent This Long While’ is anxiously waiting for her loved one to return home. The nervous buzz of anticipation as the speaker waits to return to a life of comfort and mundanity, a puzzle from which their lover is the only missing piece, gives this love poem a beautiful raw honesty.
45. «My Lover Is a Woman» by Pat Parker
my lover is a woman
& when i hold her
feel her warmth
i feel good
feel safe
Pat Parker was an American poet and activist who drew great inspiration from her life as an African-American lesbian feminist. ‘My Lover Is a Woman’ is about the struggles Parker faced as an openly queer woman of colour, and the safe harbour her lover represents in that storm.
46. «It Is Here» by Harold Pinter
What is this stance we take,
To turn away and then turn back?
What did we hear?
It was the breath we took when we first met.
Listen. It is here.
Relationships have a funny way of transcending time and space, and that transcendence isexpressed in Harold Pinter’s beautiful love poem ‘It Is Here’ as he asks his lover to think back to the beginning of their relationship, and in doing so brings the long-passed moment to life.
47. «Untitled» by Christopher Poindexter
I miss you even when you
are beside me.
I dream of your body
even when you are sleeping
in my arms.
The words I love you
could never be enough.
Christopher Poindexter here presents a deeply honest and relatable portrait of a love that goes beyond the limits of language, as he describes the overwhelming and paradoxical longing it’s possible to feel even when your lover is right by your side.
48. “Love Is Not A Word” by Riyas Qurana
Amidst all this
I keep a falling flower in the mid-air
Not to fall on the earth
Is it not up to you who search for it
To come and sit on it
And make love?
Don’t forget to bring the word
Darling
When you come.
Written from the point of view of a personified love, “Love Is Not A Word” is a rather ambiguous poem. Riyas Qurana explores the notion of love as a whole and relates the concept to nature to emphasize how elemental it is to the human experience.
49. «[Again and again, even though we know love’s landscape]» by Rainer Maria Rilke
Again and again, even though we know love’s landscape
and the little churchyard with its lamenting names
and the terrible reticent gorge in which the others
end: again and again the two of us walk out together
under the ancient trees, lay ourselves down again and
again
among the flowers, and look up into the sky.
Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke believed that it was ‘perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks’ for one human to love another (Letters to a Young Poet, 1929). In ‘[Again and again, even though we know love’s landscape]’, Rilke celebrates the continuous, everyday love that two people can share, and the strength that comes from making one vulnerable enough to love another, despite knowing the risk of heartbreak.
50. «Echo» by Christina Rossetti
In ‘Echo’, Christina Rossetti reflects on a lost love and how she wishes it would come back to her like an echo. Rossetti is in despair, longing for her ex-lover, and the resulting yearning creates an equally heartbreaking and beautiful love poem.
51. «I loved you first: but afterwards your love» by Christina Rossetti
I loved you first: but afterwards your love
Outsoaring mine, sang such a loftier song
As drowned the friendly cooings of my dove.
Which owes the other most? my love was long,
And yours one moment seemed to wax more strong
Despite a concern with reciprocity (or a lack thereof) in these opening lines, a feeling of ‘oneness’ in fact runs throughout ‘I loved you first: but afterwards your love’, also by Rossetti. This poem reflects the feeling of complete understanding between two people who love each other deeply, as Rossetti explains how their individual feelings combine to create one love, a whole greater than the sum of its parts.
52. «Defeated by Love» by Rumi
The sky was lit
by the splendor of the moon
So powerful
I fell to the ground
Your love
has made me sure
I am ready to forsake
this worldly life
and surrender
to the magnificence
of your Bering
The words of 13th-century Persian poet Rumi have transcended national, ethnic, and religious divides for centuries. The passion and dedication in ‘Defeated by Love’ is apparent in each line, making this enduring testament to the power of love one of the most beautiful love poems on our list.
53. «Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? (Sonnet 18)» by William Shakespeare
Although William Shakespeare may not have have written any romance novels, there are few more celebrated love poets and ‘Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?’ is perhaps the most iconic and recognizable opening line of any love poem. Its simplicity compared to some of Shakespeare’s other sonnets makes it stand out against an incomparable library of work, but the hidden depths and layers of meaning in this densely packed mini-masterpiece have kept readers returning for centuries.
54. «Let me not to the marriage of true minds (Sonnet 116)» by William Shakespeare
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove.
O no! it is an ever-fixed mark
In ‘Sonnet 116’, Shakespeare talks about the permanence of love — even if the people change as time goes on, the love between them will remain true and strong, or else it isn’t love at all.
55. «My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun» (Sonnet 130) by William Shakespeare
I grant I never saw a goddess go;
My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:
And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare
As any she belied with false compare.
In Shakespeare’s final entry on our list, he challenges the traditional association of love with beauty. It doesn’t matter what his lover looks like — to him she is the most rare and valuable thing in the world.
56. «Love’s Philosophy» by Percy Bysshe Shelley
The fountains mingle with the river
And the rivers with the ocean,
The winds of heaven mix forever
With a sweet emotion;
Nothing in the world is single;
All things by a law divine
In one spirit meet and mingle
Why not I with thine?
‘Love’s Philosophy’, while a beautiful love poem, offers a much more logical take on romance than many of the other poems on our list. Percy Bysshe Shelley expresses to his lover that their love is as natural as a river meeting the ocean — but equally that all the beauties of nature are meaningless if he doesn’t have her.
57. «One Day I Wrote her Name (Sonnet 75)» by Edmund Spenser
One day I wrote her name upon the strand,
But came the waves and washed it away:
Again I wrote it with a second hand,
But came the tide, and made my pains his prey.
This beautiful love poem is part of Amoretti, a sonnet cycle about Edmund Spenser’s relationship with Elizabeth Boyle. Spenser explains in ‘Sonnet 75’ that — despite the seemingly portentous way his attempts to make a physical monument to his lover by writing her name in the sand is repeatedly foiled — his love for Boyle will never end, and he will do whatever it takes to make it last.
58. «I Am Not Yours» by Sara Teasdale
A longing for genuine, passionate, all-encompassing love is the central theme of Sara Tesdale’s ‘I Am Not Yours’. The speaker doesn’t feel any sense of belonging in her current relationship, and wants to find a partner who makes her feel lost in their love.
59. «Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal» by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white;
Nor waves the cypress in the palace walk;
Nor winks the gold fin in the porphyry font.
The firefly wakens; waken thou with me.
Now drops the milk-white peacock like a ghost,
And like a ghost she glimmers on to me.
‘Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal’ is a song from The Princess, a longer, narrative poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. It was inspired by the ghazal, a Persian form of love poetry which focuses on unsustainable love, and is a classic masterclass in sensual description.
60. «poem I wrote sitting across the table from you» by Kevin Varrone
I would fold myself
into the hole in my pocket and disappear
into the pocket of myself, or at least my pants
but before I did
like some ancient star
I’d grab your hand
Kevin Varrone confesses how close he feels to his lover in ‘poem I wrote sitting across the table from you’. Written in a moment of procrastination as he worked on a longer verse in a coffee shop, the poem expresses how Varrone wants his lover to partake on all of his adventures, no matter how big or small.
61. «On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous» by Ocean Vuong
Tell me it was for the hunger
& nothing less. For hunger is to give
the body what it knows
it cannot keep. That this amber light
whittled down by another war
is all that pins my hand
to your chest.
While you’re probably familiar with Vuong’s 2019 novel by the same name, you may not be familiar with the poem that came first. Ocean Vuong’s writing invites the reader to slow down and understand every word, and ‘On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous’ explores themes of desire, impermanence, and craving when in love.
62. «Love After Love» by Derek Walcott
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Nobel Prize winning poet Derek Walcott offers advice and reassurance to anyone experiencing a breakup in his poem ‘Love After Love’. Encouraging the reader to return to themselves, the poem is a tonic in a world full of love poetry which expects us to hand ourselves over to lovers completely.
63. «I Love You» by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
I love your lips when they’re wet with wine
And red with a wild desire;
I love your eyes when the lovelight lies
Lit with a passionate fire.
I love your arms when the warm white flesh
Touches mine in a fond embrace;
I love your hair when the strands enmesh
Your kisses against my face.
In ‘I Love You’, Ella Wheeler Wilcox lays out the tiny moments that add up to why the speaker feels so passionately about her love, before going on to describe the colder attributes she’s not looking for in a relationship. This juxtaposition helps to make the initial love she describes all the more special.
64. «We Have Not Long to Love» by Tennessee Williams
Though better known for his plays than as a romance author, Tennessee Williams was also an accomplished poet. In ‘We Have Not Long to Love’ Williams stresses the importance of appreciating the time we do have and cherishing the love that comes with it, remembering that nothing will last forever.
65. «Poem to First Love» by Matthew Yeager
To have been told “I love you” by you could well be, for me,
the highlight of my life, the best feeling, the best peak
on my feeling graph, in the way that the Chrysler building
might not be the tallest building in the NY sky but is
the best, the most exquisitely spired
Matthew Yeager’s ‘Poem to First Love’ is a bittersweet young romance where, as the title suggests, the speaker is reminiscing about his relationship with his first love, and explores the different ways one might try to logically quantify the utterly illogical force of love.
***
Looking to dive a little deeper into the world of poetry? Check out our post on the 60+ best poetry books of all time!
topic: Love Poems
Fun and silly love poems.
Pizza, Pizza, I Love You
Lunchbox Love Note
Today I Got a Valentine
Valentine’s Day Card
I’m Keeping My Distance
I Think I’m in Love with My Smartphone
Bow Wow Wow, Meow, Meow
My Girlfriend
Love Sick
Xbox, Xbox
I Love Me
Homework, I Love You
Candy Love
The Llama and the Aardvark
Oh My Darling, Valentine
A Valentine for Mom
Ode on a Unicycle
Roses are Red
If I Had a Dollar
Modern Popularity
Georgie Porgie
Oh My Darling, Frankenstein
My Grandpa
Porcupine Valentine
Don’t let modern love fool you. There is still much whimsy and joy to be found by falling in love. In this day and age, when you can’t find the perfect song lyrics that capture how you feel, read a poem. For years poets have encapsulated the essence of love in words that send visceral feelings down our spines.
Give this gift to your partner by finding the best love poems for him or her in our list below.
Love Poems: 25 of the Most Romantic Poems about Love
1. I cannot live with You –
It would be Life –
And Life is over there –
Behind the Shelf
The Sexton keeps the Key to –
Putting up
Our Life – His Porcelain –
Like a Cup –
Discarded of the Housewife –
Quaint – or Broke –
A newer Sevres pleases –
Old Ones crack –
I could not die – with You –
For One must wait
To shut the Other’s Gaze down –
You – could not –
And I – could I stand by
And see You – freeze –
Without my Right of Frost –
Death’s privilege?
Nor could I rise – with You –
Because Your Face
Would put out Jesus’ –
That New Grace
Glow plain – and foreign
On my homesick Eye –
Except that You than He
Shone closer by –
They’d judge Us – How –
For You – served Heaven – You know,
Or sought to –
I could not –
Because You saturated Sight –
And I had no more Eyes
For sordid excellence
As Paradise
And were You lost, I would be –
Though My Name
Rang loudest
On the Heavenly fame –
And were You – saved –
And I – condemned to be
Where You were not –
That self – were Hell to Me –
So We must meet apart –
You there – I – here –
With just the Door ajar
That Oceans are – and Prayer –
And that White Sustenance –
Despair –
– Emily Dickinson
2. Love is more thicker than forget
more thinner than recall
more seldom than a wave is wet
more frequent than to fail
it is most mad and moonly
and less it shall unbe
than all the sea which only
is deeper than the sea
love is less always than to win
less never than alive
less bigger than the least begin
less littler than forgive
it is most sane and sunly
and more it cannot die
than all the sky which only
is higher than the sky
– E.E. Cummings
3. Looking up at the stars, I know quite well
That, for all they care, I can go to hell,
But on earth indifference is the least
We have to dread from man or beast.
How should we like it were stars to burn
With a passion for us we could not return?
If equal affection cannot be,
Let the more loving one be me.
Admirer as I think I am
Of stars that do not give a damn,
I cannot, now I see them, say
I missed one terribly all day.
Were all stars to disappear or die,
I should learn to look at an empty sky
And feel its total dark sublime,
Though this might take me a little time.
– W. H. Auden
4. All thoughts, all passions, all delights,
Whatever stirs this mortal frame,
All are but ministers of Love,
And feed his sacred flame.
Oft in my waking dreams do I
Live o’er again that happy hour,
When midway on the mount I lay,
Beside the ruin’d tower.
The moonshine, stealing o’er the scene,
Had blended with the lights of eve;
And she was there, my hope, my joy,
My own dear Genevieve!
She lean’d against the armèd man,
The statue of the armèd Knight;
She stood and listen’d to my lay,
Amid the lingering light.
Few sorrows hath she of her own,
My hope! my joy! my Genevieve!
She loves me best whene’er I sing
The songs that make her grieve.
I play’d a soft and doleful air;
I sang an old and moving story—
An old rude song, that suited well
That ruin wild and hoary.
She listen’d with a flitting blush,
With downcast eyes and modest grace;
For well she knew I could not choose
But gaze upon her face.
I told her of the Knight that wore
Upon his shield a burning brand;
And that for ten long years he woo’d
The Lady of the Land.
I told her how he pined: and ah!
The deep, the low, the pleading tone
With which I sang another’s love,
Interpreted my own.
She listen’d with a flitting blush,
With downcast eyes, and modest grace;
And she forgave me, that I gazed
Too fondly on her face!
But when I told the cruel scorn
That crazed that bold and lovely Knight,
And that he cross’d the mountain-woods,
Nor rested day nor night;
That sometimes from the savage den,
And sometimes from the darksome shade,
And sometimes starting up at once
In green and sunny glade—
There came and look’d him in the face
An angel beautiful and bright;
And that he knew it was a Fiend,
This miserable Knight!
And that, unknowing what he did,
He leap’d amid a murderous band,
And saved from outrage worse than death
The Lady of the Land;—
And how she wept and clasp’d his knees;
And how she tended him in vain—
And ever strove to expiate
The scorn that crazed his brain;—
And that she nursed him in a cave;
And how his madness went away,
When on the yellow forest leaves
A dying man he lay;—
His dying words—but when I reach’d
That tenderest strain of all the ditty,
My faltering voice and pausing harp
Disturb’d her soul with pity!
All impulses of soul and sense
Had thrill’d my guileless Genevieve;
The music and the doleful tale,
The rich and balmy eve;
And hopes, and fears that kindle hope,
An undistinguishable throng,
And gentle wishes long subdued,
Subdued and cherish’d long!
She wept with pity and delight,
She blush’d with love and virgin shame;
And like the murmur of a dream,
I heard her breathe my name.
Her bosom heaved—she stepp’d aside,
As conscious of my look she stept—
Then suddenly, with timorous eye
She fled to me and wept.
She half enclosed me with her arms,
She press’d me with a meek embrace;
And bending back her head, look’d up,
And gazed upon my face.
‘Twas partly love, and partly fear,
And partly ’twas a bashful art,
That I might rather feel, than see,
The swelling of her heart.
I calm’d her fears, and she was calm,
And told her love with virgin pride;
And so I won my Genevieve,
My bright and beauteous Bride.
– Samual Taylor Coleridge
— 5th of 25 Poems About Love
5. My Love is of a birth as rare
As ’tis for object strange and high:
It was begotten by despair
Upon Impossibility.
Magnanimous Despair alone
Could show me so divine a thing,
Where feeble Hope could ne’r have flown
But vainly flapt its Tinsel Wing.
And yet I quickly might arrive
Where my extended Soul is fixt,
But Fate does Iron wedges drive,
And alwaies crowds it self betwixt.
For Fate with jealous Eye does see
Two perfect Loves; nor lets them close:
Their union would her ruine be,
And her Tyrannick pow’er depose.
And therefore her Decrees of Steel
Us as the distant Poles have plac’d,
(Though Love’s whole World on us doth wheel)
Not by themselves to be embrac’d.
Unless the giddy Heaven fall,
And Earth some new Convulsion tear;
And, us to joyn, the World should all
Be cramp’d into a Planisphere.
As Lines so Loves oblique may well
Themselves in every Angle greet:
But ours so truly Parallel,
Though infinite can never meet.
Therefore the Love which us doth bind,
But Fate so enviously debarrs,
Is the Conjunction of the Mind,
And Opposition of the Stars.
-Andrew Marvell
6. What was said to the rose that made it open was said
to me here in my chest.
What was told the cypress that made it strong
and straight, what was
whispered the jasmine so it is what it is, whatever made
sugarcane sweet, whatever
was said to the inhabitants of the town of Chigil in
Turkestan that makes them
so handsome, whatever lets the pomegranate flower blush
like a human face, that is
being said to me now. I blush. Whatever put eloquence in
language, that’s happening here.
The great warehouse doors open; I fill with gratitude,
chewing a piece of sugarcane,
in love with the one to whom every that belongs!
– Jalal al-Din Rumi
7. We cannot live, except thus mutually
We alternate, aware or unaware,
The reflex act of life: and when we bear
Our virtue onward most impulsively,
Most full of invocation, and to be
Most instantly compellant, certes, there
We live most life, whoever breathes most air
And counts his dying years by sun and sea.
But when a soul, by choice and conscience, doth
Throw out her full force on another soul,
The conscience and the concentration both make
mere life, Love. For Life in perfect whole
And aim consummated, is Love in sooth,
As nature’s magnet-heat rounds pole with pole.
-Elizabeth Barret Browning
Also Check: Love Poems for Her | Love Poems for Him | Short Love Poems
8. Come when the nights are bright with stars
Or come when the moon is mellow;
Come when the sun his golden bars
Drops on the hay-field yellow.
Come in the twilight soft and gray,
Come in the night or come in the day,
Come, O love, whene’er you may,
And you are welcome, welcome.
You are sweet, O Love, dear Love,
You are soft as the nesting dove.
Come to my heart and bring it to rest
As the bird flies home to its welcome nest.
Come when my heart is full of grief
Or when my heart is merry;
Come with the falling of the leaf
Or with the redd’ning cherry.
Come when the year’s first blossom blows,
Come when the summer gleams and glows,
Come with the winter’s drifting snows,
And you are welcome, welcome.
– Paul Dunbar
9. I will make you brooches and toys for your delight
Of bird-song at morning and star-shine at night.
I will make a palace fit for you and me
Of green days in forests and blue days at sea.
I will make my kitchen, and you shall keep your room,
Where white flows the river and bright blows the broom,
And you shall wash your linen and keep your body white
In rainfall at morning and dewfall a night.
And this shall be for music when no one else is near,
The fine song for singing, the rare song to hear!
That only I remember, that only you admire,
Of the broad road that stretches and the roadside fire.
-Robert Louis Stevenson
— 10th of 25 Love Poems
10. Things happen when you drink too much mescal.
One night, with not enough food in my belly,
he kept on buying. I’m a girl who’ll fall
damn near in love with gratitude and, well, he
was hot and generous and so the least
that I could do was let him kiss me, hard
and soft and any way you want it, beast
and beauty, lime and salt—sweet Bacchus’ pards—
and when his friend showed up I felt so warm
and generous I let him kiss me too.
His buddy asked me if it was the worm
inside that makes me do the things I do.
I wasn’t sure which worm he meant, the one
I ate? The one that eats at me alone?
– Moira Egan
11. Romance, who loves to nod and sing,
With drowsy head and folded wing,
Among the green leaves as they shake
Far down within some shadowy lake,
To me a painted paroquet
Hath been—a most familiar bird—
Taught me my alphabet to say—
To lisp my very earliest word
While in the wild wood I did lie,
A child—with a most knowing eye.
Of late, eternal Condor years
So shake the very Heaven on high
With tumult as they thunder by,
I have no time for idle cares
Through gazing on the unquiet sky.
And when an hour with calmer wings
Its down upon my spirit flings—
That little time with lyre and rhyme
To while away—forbidden things!
My heart would feel to be a crime
Unless it trembled with the strings.
-Edgar Allen Poe
12. Oh! for the welcome breath of country air,
With Summer skies and flowers,
To shout and feel once more the halcyon
Of gayer boyhood hours.
I think the sight of fields and shady lanes
Would ease my heart of pains.
To cool once more my thirst, where bubbled up
The waters of a spring,
Where I have seen the golden daffodils
And lillies flourishing,
My fevered heart would more than half forget
Its sighs, and vain regret.
Far, far away, from early scenes am I;
And, too, my youth has fled;
For me a stranger’s land, a stranger’s sky,
That arches overhead.
For scenes and joys that now have passed me by,
I can but give a sigh.
– George Marion Mclellan
13. Easy light storms in through the window, soft
edges of the world, smudged by mist, a squirrel’s
nest rigged high in the maple. I’ve got a bone
to pick with whomever is in charge. All year,
I’ve said, You know what’s funny? and then,
Nothing, nothing is funny. Which makes me laugh
in an oblivion-is-coming sort of way. A friend
writes the word lover in a note and I am strangely
excited for the word lover to come back. Come back
lover, come back to the five and dime. I could
squeal with the idea of blissful release, oh lover,
what a word, what a world, this gray waiting. In me,
a need to nestle deep into the safe-keeping of sky.
I am too used to nostalgia now, a sweet escape
of age. Centuries of pleasure before us and after
us, still right now, a softness like the worn fabric of a nightshirt
and what I do not say is, I trust the world to come back.
Return like a word, long forgotten and maligned
for all its gross tenderness, a joke told in a sun beam,
the world walking in, ready to be ravaged, open for business.
– Ada Limon
14. One night a guy & a girl were
driving home from the movies. The
boy sensed there was
something wrong because of the painful
silence they shared between them
that night. The girl then asked the boy to pull over
because she wanted to talk. She told him that her
feelings had changed & that it was time to move on.
A silent tear slid down his cheek as he
slowly reached into his pocket & passed her a folded note.
At that moment, a drunk driver was speeding down
that very same street. He swerved
right into the drivers seat, killing the boy.
Miraculously, the girl survived. Remembering the note, she
pulled it out & read it.
“Without your love, I would die.”
– Le-Rita Clark
— 15th of 25 Love Poems
15. Look, the trees
are turning
their own bodies
into pillars
of light,
are giving off the rich
fragrance of cinnamon
and fulfillment,
the long tapers
of cattails
are bursting and floating away over
the blue shoulders
of the ponds,
and every pond,
no matter what its
name is, is
nameless now.
Every year
everything
I have ever learned
in my lifetime
leads back to this: the fires
and the black river of loss
whose other side
is salvation,
whose meaning
none of us will ever know.
To live in this world
you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it
against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it
Go,
to let it go.
– Mary Oliver
16. Guy calls the doctor, says the wife’s
contractions are five minutes apart.
Doctor says, Is this her first child?
guy says, No, it’s her husband.
I promise to try to remember who
I am. Wife gets up on one elbow,
says, I wanted to get married.
It seemed a fulfillment of some
several things, a thing to be done.
Even the diamond ring was some
thing like a quest, a thing they
set you out to get and how insane
the quest is; how you have to turn
it every way before you can even
think to seek it; this metaphysical
refraining is in fact the quest. Who’d
have guessed? She sighs, I like
the predictability of two, I like
my pleasures fully expected,
when the expectation of them
grows patterned in its steady
surprise. I’ve got my sweet
and tumble pat. Here on earth,
I like to count upon a thing
like that. Thus explained
the woman in contractions
to her lover holding on
the telephone for the doctor
to recover from this strange
conversational turn. You say
you’re whom? It is a pleasure
to meet you. She rolls her
eyes, but he’d once asked her
Am I your first lover? and she’d
said, Could be. Your face looks
familiar. It’s the same type of
generative error. The grammar
of the spoken word will flip, let alone
the written, until something new is
in us, and in our conversation.
– Jennifer Michael Hecht
17. My love,
you are water upon water
upon water until it turns
azure, mountainous.
The horizon fills like sand
between glass marbles. So much
has passed between us—
last night you told me
to press your hand
harder and harder as I pained.
The sunset was at its last
embers. The dark was stealing
the blue light from our room.
I was falling into you.
– Adeeba Shahid Talukder
18. I lie here thinking of you:—
the stain of love
is upon the world!
Yellow, yellow, yellow
it eats into the leaves,
smears with saffron
the horned branches that lean
heavily
against a smooth purple sky!
There is no light
only a honey-thick stain
that drips from leaf to leaf
and limb to limb
spoiling the colors
of the whole world—
you far off there under
the wine-red selvage of the west!
– William Carol Williams
19. There is a Smile of Love
And there is a Smile of Deceit
And there is a Smile of Smiles
In which these two Smiles meet
And there is a Frown of Hate
And there is a Frown of disdain
And there is a Frown of Frowns
Which you strive to forget in vain
For it sticks in the Hearts deep Core
And it sticks in the deep Back bone
And no Smile that ever was smild
But only one Smile alone
That betwixt the Cradle & Grave
It only once Smild can be
But when it once is Smild
Theres an end to all Misery
– William Blake
— 20th of 25 Love Poems
20. You’re doing a crossword.
I’m working on a puzzle.
Do you love me enough?
What’s the missing word?
Do I love you enough?
Where’s the missing piece?
Yesterday I was cross with you.
You weren’t paying enough attention.
You were cross with me.
I wasn’t paying enough attention.
Our words crossed.
Where are the missing pieces?
What are the missing words?
Yet last night we fit together like words in a crossword.
Pieces of a puzzle.
-Lloyd Schwartz
21. The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone!
Sweet voice, sweet lips, soft hand, and softer breast,
Warm breath, light whisper, tender semi-tone,
Bright eyes, accomplish’d shape, and lang’rous waist!
Faded the flower and all its budded charms,
Faded the sight of beauty from my eyes,
Faded the shape of beauty from my arms,
Faded the voice, warmth, whiteness, paradise –
Vanish’d unseasonably at shut of eve,
When the dusk holiday – or holinight
Of fragrant-curtain’d love begins to weave
The woof of darkness thick, for hid delight,
But, as I’ve read love’s missal through to-day,
He’ll let me sleep, seeing I fast and pray.
– John Keats
22. is even more fun than going to San Sebastian, Irún, Hendaye, Biarritz, Bayonne
or being sick to my stomach on the Travesera de Gracia in Barcelona
partly because in your orange shirt you look like a better happier St. Sebastian
partly because of my love for you, partly because of your love for yoghurt
partly because of the fluorescent orange tulips around the birches
partly because of the secrecy our smiles take on before people and statuary
it is hard to believe when I’m with you that there can be anything as still
as solemn as unpleasantly definitive as statuary when right in front of it
in the warm New York 4 o’clock light we are drifting back and forth
between each other like a tree breathing through its spectacles
and the portrait show seems to have no faces in it at all, just paint
you suddenly wonder why in the world anyone ever did them
I look at you and I would rather look at you than all the portraits in the world
except possibly for the Polish Rider occasionally and anyway it’s in the Frick
which thank heavens you haven’t gone to yet so we can go together for the first time and the fact that you move so beautifully more or less takes care of Futurism
just as at home I never think of the Nude Descending a Staircase or
at a rehearsal a single drawing of Leonardo or Michelangelo that used to wow me
and what good does all the research of the Impressionists do them
when they never got the right person to stand near the tree when the sun sank
or for that matter Marino Marini when he didn’t pick the rider as carefully
as the horse
it seems they were all cheated of some marvelous experience
which is not going to go wasted on me which is why I’m telling you about it
-Frank O-Hara
23. I shall never have any fear of love,
Not of its depth nor its uttermost height,
Its exquisite pain and its terrible delight.
I shall never have any fear of love.
I shall never hesitate to go down
Into the fastness of its abyss
Nor shrink from the cruelty of its awful kiss.
I shall never have any fear of love.
Never shall I dread love’s strength
Nor any pain it might give.
Through all the years I may live
I shall never have any fear of love.
I shall never draw back from love
Through fear of its vast pain
But build joy of it and count it again.
I shall never have any fear of love.
I shall never tremble nor flinch
From love’s moulding touch:
I have loved too terribly and too much
Ever to have any fear of love.
-Elsa Gidlow
24. When buffeted and beaten by life’s storms,
When by the bitter cares of life oppressed,
I want no surer haven than your arms,
I want no sweeter heaven than your breast.
When over my life’s way there falls the blight
Of sunless days, and nights of starless skies;
Enough for me, the calm and steadfast light
That softly shines within your loving eyes.
The world, for me, and all the world can hold
Is circled by your arms; for me there lies,
Within the lights and shadows of your eyes,
The only beauty that is never old.
-James Wheldon Johnson
— 25th of 25 Love Poems
25. The light retreats and is generous again.
No you to speak of, anywhere—neither in vicinity nor distance,
so I look at the blue water, the snowy egret, the lace of its feathers
shaking in the wind, the lake—no, I am lying.
There are no egrets here, no water. Most of the time,
my mind gnaws on such ridiculous fictions.
My phone notes littered with lines like Beauty will not save you.
Or: mouthwash, yogurt, cilantro.
A hummingbird zips past me, its luminescent plumage
disturbing my vision like a tiny dorsal fin.
But what I want does not appear. Instead, I find the redwoods and pines,
figs that have fallen and burst open on the pavement,
announcing that sickly sweet smell,
the sweetness of grief, my prayer for what is gone.
You are so dramatic, I say to the reflection on my phone,
then order the collected novels of Jean Rhys.
She, too, was humiliated by her body, that it wanted
such stupid, simple things: food and cherry wine, to touch someone.
On my daily walk, I steal Meyer lemons from my neighbors’ yard,
a small pomegranate. Instead of eating them,
I observe their casual rot on the kitchen counter,
this theatre of good things turning into something else.
– Aris Aber
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I Love You More Than // 25 Short Love Poems // 73 I Love You Quotes
46 Love Puns // 46 Love Quotes For Him // 40 Love Quotes For Her // 100 Reasons Why I Love You
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Whitney graduated from the University of Illinois in Springfield with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Minor in Mass Communication. She is currently an ESL teacher and freelance writer. While raising a family with her fiancé, she loves to read, cook, binge popular movies/shows, listen to true crime podcasts, and explore nature. Whitney loves to write about everything from English literature to health and wellness to parenting.