The Poets' Corner
Where words from every era find a home — curated couplets, verses and lines that stay with you.
Featured Poets
Handpicked voices — each card shows a short line and a link to read more. We’ll add more poets over time; suggest yours below.
Rumi
13th century mystic
"What you seek is seeking you."
Ahmed Faraz
Modern Urdu poet
"I loved you quietly, in the way people do in secret."
Jaun Elia
Rebel voice
"Your name is the song I keep warm between verses."
Pablo Neruda
Love & earth
"I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees."
Maya Angelou
Truth & courage
"Still I rise."
Ghalib
Urdu classical
"The heart has reasons which reason knows not."
Faiz Ahmed Faiz
Revolution & romance
"Speak — for your lips are free."
Parveen Shakir
Elegance & emotion
"I speak softly — but my wounds speak louder."
Mir Taqi Mir
Melancholy master
"I am the city's sorrow — they call me Mir."
Allama Iqbal
Philosophy & vision
"Elevate yourself — God will show you the heights."
Emily Dickinson
Silence & depth
"Hope is the thing with feathers."
Leonard Cohen
Dark truth & beauty
"There is a crack in everything — that's how the light gets in."
We'll be adding more poets — have a recommendation?
Browse by Mood
Pick the mood — the page will show only poets & poems that fit the feeling.
Rumi
13th-century Persian mystic & poet
Spotlight: A founding voice of Sufi poetry whose verses explore longing, union, and the inner journey.
Poet Spotlight — Rumi
13th century · Sufi mystic
Little-known fact:
Though today known worldwide, many of Rumi’s most intimate poems were written as private letters and odes to his teacher Shams — they were not initially meant for public reading.
Handpicked lines
- "The wound is the place where the Light enters you."
- "What you seek is seeking you."
- "Let yourself be silently drawn by the strange pull of what you really love."
- "Lose yourself completely — and find yourself there."
Most-loved poem (highlight)
"The Guest House" — a famous Rumi piece often used to remind readers that all emotions are visitors to be welcomed.
Brief life note: Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi (1207–1273) lived in Greater Khorasan and later Konya (modern Turkey). His poetry blends ecstatic spiritual longing with down-to-earth images — wine, gardens, marketplaces — to point beyond surface life to the beloved within.
“When Everything is loud poetry whispers and stays.”
— The Poet’s Corner