Dark Poetry
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25 Dark Poems for When You Want to Explore the Shadows

Poetry can portray joy and pleasure as well as sadness, anguish, and the transience of existence. These dark poems, at their best, help us find catharsis. They express the broken mirror that occasionally allows us to see our world.

Dark Poetry

Darkness and sadness are close relatives in nature. Black has been the color of mourning since the dawn of mankind. Sunlight draws happiness, whereas darkness draws sadness.

Darkness and sorrow have a certain romance. There is something enigmatic about what is concealed and unknowable. Dark poetry could try to romanticize melancholy and misery.

The poetry listed below illustrate darkness in all its manifestations. Poems that honor the night or convey the burdens of mortality, pain, grief, or any other unfavorable feelings are available.

1. Nothing But Death By Pablo Neruda

There are cemeteries that are lonely,

the heart moving through a tunnel,

in it darkness, darkness, darkness,

like a shipwreck we die going into ourselves,

as though we were drowning inside our hearts,

as though we lived falling out of the skin into the soul.

2. Forgetfulness By Karinna Alves Gulias

Time could carry our weight

if only we could paint dice

to wait on the windowsill

Wait for a guest

Wait for a moment of your pride

or patience

And let it be

Dusty or kept

3. Love and Friendship by Emily Brontë

 Love is like the wild rose-briar,

Friendship like the holly-tree —

The holly is dark when the rose-briar blooms

But which will bloom most contantly?

The wild-rose briar is sweet in the spring,

Its summer blossoms scent the air;

Yet wait till winter comes again

And who wil call the wild-briar fair?

Then scorn the silly rose-wreath now

And deck thee with the holly’s sheen,

That when December blights thy brow

He may still leave thy garland green.

4. The Door in the Dark by Robert Frost

 In going from room to room in the dark,

I reached out blindly to save my face,

But neglected, however lightly, to lace

My fingers and close my arms in an arc.

A slim door got in past my guard,

And hit me a blow in the head so hard

I had my native simile jarred.

So people and things don’t pair any more

With what they used to pair with before.

5. Haiku by Jack Kerouac

 Birds singing

 in the dark

—Rainy dawn.

6. If Death Is Kind By Sara Teasdale

Perhaps if Death is kind, and there can be returning,

We will come back to earth some fragrant night,

And take these lanes to find the sea, and bending

Breathe the same honeysuckle, low and white.

7. Old Photographs By Babeba Baderoon

On my desk is a photograph of you

taken by the woman who loved you then.

In some photos her shadow falls

in the foreground. In this one,

her body is not that far from yours.

Did you hold your head that way

because she loved it?

8. The Street by Octavio Paz

It’s a long and silent street.

I walk in the dark and trip and fall

and get up and step blindly

on the mute stones and dry leaves

and someone behind me is also walking:

if I stop, he stops;

if I run,, he runs. I turn around: no one.

Everything is black, there is no exit,

and I turn and turn corners

that always lead to the street

where no one waits for me, no one follows,

where I follow a man who trips

and gets up and says when he sees me: no one.

9. If He dissolve — then by Emily Dickinson

 If He dissolve — then —

there is nothing — more —

Eclipse — at Midnight —

It was dark — before —

Sunset — at Easter —

Blindness — on the Dawn —

Faint Star of Bethlehem —

Gone down!

Would but some God — inform Him —

Or it be too late!

Say — that the pulse just lisps —

The Chariots wait —

Say — that a little life — for His —

Is leaking — red —

His little Spaniel — tell Him!

Will He heed?

10. Good night! which put the candle out? by Emily Dickinson

Good night! which put the candle out?

A jealous zephyr, not a doubt.

   Ah! friend, you little knew

How long at that celestial wick

The angels labored diligent;

   Extinguished, now, for you!

It might have been the lighthouse spark

Some sailor, rowing in the dark,

   Had importuned to see!

It might have been the waning lamp

That lit the drummer from the camp

   To purer reveille!

11. Through the Dark Sod — as Education by Emily Dickinson

 Through the Dark Sod — as Education —

The Lily passes sure —

Feels her white foot — no trepidation —

Her faith — no fear —

Afterward — in the Meadow —

Swinging her Beryl Bell —

The Mold-life — all forgotten — now —

In Ecstasy — and Dell —

12. Woods by Wendell Berry

 I part the out thrusting branches

and come in beneath

the blessed and the blessing trees.

Though I am silent

there is singing around me.

Though I am dark

there is vision around me.

Though I am heavy

there is flight around me.

13. The Villain by William Henry Davies

 While joy gave clouds the light of stars,

That beamed wher’er they looked;

And calves and lambs had tottering knees,

Excited, while they sucked;

While every bird enjoyed his song,

Without one thought of harm or wrong–

I turned my head and saw the wind,

Not far from where I stood,

Dragging the corn by her golden hair,

Into a dark and lonely wood.

14. Looking into a Face by Robert Bly

Conversation brings us so close! Opening

The surfs of the body

Bringing fish up near the sun

And stiffening the backbones of the sea!

I have wandered in a face for hours

Passing through dark fires.

I have risen to a body

Not yet born

Existing like a light around the body

Through which the body moves like a sliding moon.

15. Changed by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

 From the outskirts of the town,

Where of old the mile-stone stood,

Now a stranger, looking down

I behold the shadowy crown

Of the dark and haunted wood.

Is it changed, or am I changed?

Ah! the oaks are fresh and green,

But the friends with whom I ranged

Through their thickets are estranged

By the years that intervene.

Bright as ever flows the sea,

Bright as ever shines the sun,

But alas! they seem to me

Not the sun that used to be,

Not the tides that used to run.

16. Spilled Sugar By Thylias Moss

I cannot forget the sugar on the table.

The hand that spilled it was not that of

my usual father, three layers of clothes

for a wind he felt from hallway to kitchen,

the brightest room though the lightbulbs

were greasy.

17. Lot’s Wife By Wislawa Szymborska

They say I looked back out of curiosity.

But I could have had other reasons.

I looked back mourning my silver bowl.

Carelessly, while tying my sandal strap.

So I wouldn’t have to keep staring at the righteous nape

of my husband Lot’s neck.

From the sudden conviction that if I dropped dead

he wouldn’t so much as hesitate.

From the disobedience of the meek.

Checking for pursuers.

Struck by the silence, hoping God had changed his mind…

18. Autobiographical by Erica Jong

 The lover in these poems

is me;

the doctor,

Love.

He appears

as husband, lover

analyst & muse,

as father, son

& maybe even God

& surely death.

All this is true.

The man you turn to

in the dark

is many men.

This is an open secret

women share

& yet agree to hide

as if

they might then

hide it from themselves.

I will not hide.

I write in the nude.

I name names.

I am I.

The doctor’s name is Love.

19. In Those Years by Adrienne Rich

 In those years, people will say, we lost track

of the meaning of we, of you

we found ourselves

reduced to I

and the whole thing became

silly, ironic, terrible:

we were trying to live a personal life

and yes, that was the only life

we could bear witness to

But the great dark birds of history screamed and plunged

into our personal weather

They were headed somewhere else but their beaks and pinions drove

along the shore, through the rags of fog

where we stood, saying I

20. All The Names We Will Not Know By Naomi Shihab Nye

Before dawn, trembling in air down to the old river,

circulating gently as a new season

delicate still in its softness, rustling raiment

of hopes never stitched tightly enough to any hour.

I was almost, maybe, just about, going to do that.

21. Song Of Some Ruin By Marilyn Krysl

We loved

like we fought, slugging our way toward each other,

sending up flares to announce our advance. And when our city

burned, we stood in the ashes, and admired each other’s

bodies. Now I ask you: how will we manage

without the steadiness of our long unhappiness?

22. Child by Sylvia Plath

 Your clear eye is the one absolutely beautiful thing.

I want to fill it with color and ducks,

The zoo of the new

Whose name you meditate —

April snowdrop, Indian pipe,

Little

Stalk without wrinkle,

Pool in which images

Should be grand and classical

Not this troublous

Wringing of hands, this dark

Ceiling without a star.

23. The Wish by Alexander Pushkin

 I shed my tears; my tears – my consolation;

And I am silent; my murmur is dead,

My soul, sunk in a depression’s shade,

Hides in its depths the bitter exultation.

I don’t deplore my passing dream of life —

Vanish in dark, the empty apparition!

I care only for my love’s infliction,

And let me die, but only die in love!

24. The Night by Alexander Pushkin

 My voice that is for you the languid one, and gentle,

Disturbs the velvet of the dark night’s mantle,

By my bedside, a candle, my sad guard,

Burns, and my poems ripple and merge in flood —

And run the streams of love, run, full of you alone,

And in the dark, your eyes shine like the precious stones,

And smile to me, and hear I the voice:

My friend, my sweetest friend.

.

.

 I love.

.

.

 I’m yours.

.

.

 I’m yours!

25. A Hymn To Childhood By Li-Young Lee

Childhood? Which childhood?

The one that didn’t last?

The one in which you learned to be afraid

of the boarded-up well in the backyard

and the ladder to the attic?

You can read these poems about death or any of these gloomy literature if these dark poems have whetted your appetite for the melancholy side of existence.

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