Can You Share Famous Short Poems About A Crush?

2026-04-29 08:11:40 40
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4 Answers

Clara
Clara
2026-04-30 21:18:36
Crush poems are like emotional snapshots. My favorite is Naomi Shihab Nye’s 'Valentine for Ernest Mann'—'You can’t order a poem like you order a taco.' It celebrates the unexpectedness of love, like suddenly noticing the quiet kid in class scribbling sonnets.

Or W.B. Yeats’ 'He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven,' where the speaker offers their dreams like fragile fabric ('Tread softly because you tread on my dreams'). It’s vulnerability in nine lines. And who could resist Mary Oliver’s 'Wild Geese'? Not exactly a crush poem, but 'Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine' is the ultimate 'I like you enough to listen' confession.
Zane
Zane
2026-04-30 22:09:28
Poetry about crushes just hits differently, doesn't it? One that’s always stuck with me is Pablo Neruda’s 'I Like For You To Be Still'—it captures that quiet longing where you’re utterly captivated by someone’s presence. The line 'you are like the night, quiet and constellated' gives me chills every time. Then there’s E.E. Cummings’ '[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]'—playful yet profound, like scribbling love notes in the margins of a notebook.

Sara Teasdale’s 'I Shall Not Care' takes a bittersweet turn, imagining unrequited love from beyond the grave ('When I am dead and over me bright April / Shakes out her rain-drenched hair'). It’s achingly romantic in a gothic way. For something lighter, Lang Leav’s modern verse in 'Love & Misadventure' nails the butterflies—'You were you / and I was I; / we were two / before our time.' God, poetry really is the best way to confess feelings without actually risking embarrassment.
Caleb
Caleb
2026-05-03 02:03:45
Crush poems? My teenage self would’ve memorized these! There’s this haiku by Mizuta Masahide that lives in my head rent-free: 'The barn burned down— / now / I can see the moon.' Not explicitly about crushes, but isn’t that the essence? Disaster makes space for beauty—like tripping over your words in front of your crush and suddenly noticing their laugh.

Then there’s Rumi’s 'The Minute I Heard My First Love Story,' which is basically the OG of crush poetry: 'I started looking around for you, not knowing / how blind that was.' Sufi mysticism meets middle-school hallway pining. And let’s not forget Nikki Giovanni’s 'You Were Gone'—short, brutal, perfect: '…the sweet aroma of you / still lingered.' Ugh, right in the heart.
Violet
Violet
2026-05-04 23:19:06
Ever notice how the best crush poems feel like they’re written in stolen moments? Take William Carlos Williams’ 'This Is Just To Say'—it’s technically about plums, but that mix of guilt and intimacy ('Forgive me / they were delicious / so sweet / and so cold') totally mirrors the vibe of leaving a love note in someone’s locker.

Then there’s the Japanese poet Izumi Shikibu’s tanka: 'Although the wind / blows terribly here, / moonlight / also leaks between the roof planks / of this ruined house.' It’s that quiet hope—the crush as a tiny light in chaos. For a modern twist, Ocean Vuong’s 'Someday I’ll Love Ocean Vuong' has lines like 'Don’t worry. Just call it horizon / & you’ll never reach it,' which nails the self-doubt wrapped up in longing. Poetry’s magic is how it turns 'what if they don’t like me back' into art.
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