Veterans Day Poems
Classic and contemporary poems that explore the meaning of Veterans Day.
BY The Editors
In poems, podcasts, articles, and more, writers measure the human effects of war. As they present the realities of life for soldiers returning home, the poets here refrain from depicting popular images of veterans. Still, there are familiar places: the veterans’ hospitals visited by Ben Belitt, Elizabeth Bishop, Etheridge Knight, and W.D. Snodgrass; the minds struggling with post-traumatic stress in Stephen Vincent Benét’s and Bruce Weigl’s poems. Other poets salute particular soldiers, from those who went AWOL (Marvin Bell) to Congressional Medal of Honor winners (Michael S. Harper). Poet-veterans Karl Shapiro, Randall Jarrell, and Siegfried Sassoon reflect on service (“I did as these have done, but did not die”) and everyday life (“Bank-holidays, and picture shows, and spats”). Sophie Jewett pauses to question “the fickle flag of truce.” Sabrina Orah Mark’s soldier fable is as funny as it is heartbreaking—reminding us, as we remember our nation’s veterans, that the questions we ask of war yield no simple answers.
From My Window
C. K. Williams
Veteran’s Hospital
Ben Belitt
Veterans of the Seventies
Marvin Bell
Facing It
Yusef Komunyakaa
Debridement
Michael S. Harper
Armistice
Sophie Jewett
A Veteran
Reginald Gibbons
The Grand Army of the Republic
John Spaulding
The Traitor
Sabrina Orah Mark
Dreamers
Siegfried Sassoon
- Alan Dugan
- Rachel Galvin
Troop Train
Karl Shapiro
- W. D. Snodgrass
Song of Napalm
Bruce Weigl
- Hyam Plutzik
“Soldier from the wars returning”
A. E. Housman
Elegy for Daniel
Jennifer Kwon Dobbs
Poetry, Wartime, and Unwieldy Metaphors
Cliff Doerksen
When Yellow Ribbons and Flag-Waving Aren't Enough
Nathaniel Fick
100 Years of Poetry: The Magazine and War
Abigail Deutsch
War-Torn Congregation
Emory Gillespie
War Stories
Evan Smith Rakoff
- Eleanor Wilner
- Yusef Komunyakaa
Can Poetry Console a Grieving Public?
Sandra M. Gilbert
Yusef Komunyakaa: “Facing It”
Robin Ekiss