Poetry
Remedial Poetry
By Carter Piagentini ’25
I’m often haunted by the feeling of being called out of my 2nd-grade class during the middle of a lesson to go practice my reading skills every week. An old lady would quietly peek her head through the door, whisper something to the teacher, and then I would find myself being led down the hall to a different room.
See MoreExcerpts from Sexuality and Confinement
By Carter Piagentini ’25
As a gay man, I started realizing the many ways sexuality affects my life when I noticed that others tended to use the word “gay” to describe me as if my identity and personhood are predicated on my sexuality. Not only did I find this word in others’ descriptions of me, but also in my descriptions of myself—after all, I even started this author’s note with “as a gay man.” Ultimately, whatever I’m described as, it will always be subsequent to the label “gay.”
See MoreIron and Blood
By Sophia Fritz ’26
Caress my tea-stained lips with your cracked fingertips / to send shivers across my brittle skin. / The chill shatters my spill gates and raises / …
See MoreThe Lucky One
By Bria Holthe ’23
We exist in an environment under severe threat. We are swiftly approaching the point of no return in the climate crisis. Eventually, we will be forced to figure out not how to stop it, but how to live through it.
See MoreDon’t Bury My Bones
By Sarah Linde ’24
When I die / Don’t bury my bones Let my body rest, / Let it gently decompose / …
See MoreI Hope You Feel No Pain
By Kayla Lindquist ’25
My poem, “I Hope You Feel No Pain” is about a ten-thousand-year-old prairie that is at the risk of being destroyed. It is located about thirty minutes from my home so it’s something that stirs up a lot of emotion in me.
See MoreTo My Core
By Sarah Smith ’25
This poem is a dramatized version of a real event that happened in my life. I lost my serious boyfriend last year to suicide.
See MoreIn Memory of Renee Van Roekel
By Central College English Department
Renee Van Roekel studied at Central College for several years in pursuit of an English degree. Renee also struggled for many years with addiction, and on April 2, 2020, it took her life. Her family shares her fight in hopes that Renee’s story will help other people with addiction seek help. The English Department celebrates Renee’s talent by sharing her poem “Break Away.”
Listen NowNo Se Espera Que Seamos Buenas En Física
By Katie Wang
“No se espera que seamos buenas en física” es un poema que hace un comentario sobre las expectativas de la sociedad sobre las mujeres. Este poema fue escrito al estilo de Alfonsina Storni, una importante escritora de la literatura hispanoamericana.
See MoreEnvironmental Minimalism and Inspirational Wonder in Paradise Lost
By Emma Chervek
Paradise Lost tells the story of the creation of the universe based on the Biblical account in the book of Genesis, focusing on Adam and Eve’s early life in Eden: earth’s ultimate paradise. This story is influenced by the natural characteristics of its setting and is therefore inseparable from the physical environment in which this story is set.
See MoreAristotle and Alison Discover the Secrets of Their Dads
By Emma Carlson '22
As popular stand-up comedian John Mulaney once dryly remarked in a special: “None of us really know our fathers.” And while it was said in the spirit of morbid comedy, it also rings a little true.
See MoreFlash of Lightning, Sprig of Lilac: Representations of Nature in Whitman’s War Poetry
By Hannah Marcum '18
Aroused and angry, I thought to beat the alarum, and urge relentless war; But soon my fingers fail’d me, my face droop’d, and I resign’d myself. To sit by the wounded and sooth them, or silently watch the dead.
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