Poetry By William Taylor Jr | Contemporary American poet

William Taylor Jr. is a contemporary American poet whose work often blends raw honesty with a lyrical, streetwise sensibility. His poetry captures the beauty and despair of ordinary life, focusing on themes such as loneliness, fleeting joy, love, and the inevitability of loss. Taylor Jr. writes with a voice that is both tender and unflinching, reflecting the struggles of urban existence while finding meaning in small, overlooked moments. His style is direct yet musical, often leaning into a conversational tone that makes his reflections accessible and deeply resonant. Many of his poems balance melancholy with hope, turning personal experiences into universal truths about being human.

A Photograph I Want to Paint

The end times have found us
on a Sunday afternoon in September

as we loll about these afterthought days
simply because they're the devil
we know.

I wander the Tenderloin
and end up at Emperor Norton's

where I sit at the bar with a quiet kinship 
between myself and the handful of others

staring down their drinks
as the hours slink off to die.

It's as good a church as any,

a temporary haven from the meaner things
the world would show us.

I like the big windows looking out onto Larkin St.

where men fight with bottles and knives
and nod off in sidewalk tents.

There's a pretty junkie girl and she 
stumbles a bit, leaning 
on a wall laughing a pretty 
junkie laugh

like a photograph I want to paint
as everything slides into whatever. 


Something as Decent

I am once more drunk 
in the afternoon 

call it my little bit of
raging against 

the machine, 

the dying of the light

and the general
dreariness of things. 

I'm drinking wine
at a fashionable
Polk St. bar

the people are pretty
and dull

their chatter 
is a kind of music

and you

if these words have
somehow found you

I hope you're okay    

whoever 
wherever    
whenever 
you are

I hope that something good
still exists for you 

I hope there is still music

a distant woman's laughter

or at least something 
as decent 

as being drunk 
in the afternoon.

Taking Every Gift


Go ahead and fall in love with the barefoot folksinger
in the North Beach bar because her songs 
are sad and pretty and true.

Embrace every doomed and desperate
love affair, real or imagined,
as each could be your last.

The options for beauty diminish, 
the people more gutless 
and cruel.

There’s not much left of things in general,

but there’s still that feeling  
of the first few beers
while sitting at a sidewalk 
table on Haight St.

lifting you away from the world  
as you briefly imagine something 
might be salvaged after all.

A woman in a wonderful hat saves you
for the next minute or two, 
and that’s the thing,

to be saved anew, moment to moment,
until your very last moment,

taking every gift that comes your way.

What the People Want

All the people want is the saddest song 
they've ever known 
playing on repeat at 3 a.m. 

and someone's assurance
that their failings are predestined
and pretty in the eyes of a kind
and forgiving universe.

They just want a new drug 
to make them forget everything
that’s ever happened
and remember it all forever at once,

with no cancer
or hangover in the morning.

They just want directions
to the nearest fire escape,
the closest chicken exit,

a back door in the break room
somebody forgot to lock.

The people only want to live long enough
to see the death of god. 

They only want revenge upon the world
and a quiet place to lay their head
as they drift off to the white noise 
of the end of it all.

They just want to feel life’s great fire 
coursing through their blood
one last time even if it 
kills them.

They want the sad music to play
all through the night

and then for the dawn 
to forget their name.


Why We Sing

The universe is forever
indifferent to our sorrow 

and this is why we 
make a music of it.

We are god-forgotten 
and this is why we dance 
the way we do

why we reach for fire
and other things
that burn  

why we learn the language 
of everything gone  
and turn it into song.

Each day we wake
into a world already lost

and this is why we sing.    

William Taylor Jr. lives and writes in San Francisco. He is the author of numerous books of poetry, and a volume of fiction. His work has been published widely in literary journals, including Rattle, The New York Quarterly, and The Chiron Review. He was a recipient of the 2013 Kathy Acker Award, and edited Cocky Moon: Selected Poems of Jack Micheline (Zeitgeist Press, 2014). His new poetry collection, The People Are Like Wolves to Me, is forthcoming from Roadside Press.

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