Unrequited Love

15+ Deep Unrequited Love Poems

(15 to start, 100+ to explore)

Poems about unrequited love delve into the ache of a one-sided affection. They capture the bittersweet emotions of longing, heartache, and unfulfilled hope.

These verses express the vulnerability of the heart and the complexities of unreciprocated feelings. Poems about unrequited love evoke empathy and introspection, reminding readers of the shared human experience of love’s unattainable yearning.

You say you love; but with a voice

by John Keats

‘You say you love; but with a voice’ also known by the refrain, “O love me truly!” deals with a speaker’s physical passion for his beloved. It is believed to be John Keats’ earliest love poem.

In this lesser-known poem, John Keats makes a clear and memorable statement about unrequited love, arguably making it one of the finest poems about the subject. Keats often taped into this topic as he struggled with his own unrequited love affair with Fanny Brawne throughout his life. The speaker listens to his prospective lover tell him that she loves him. But, he doubts how truthful her words are.

You say you love ; but with a voice

Chaster than a nun's, who singeth

The soft Vespers to herself

While the chime-bell ringeth-

I Am Not Yours

by Sara Teasdale

‘I Am Not Yours’ by Sara Teasdale describes the emotions of a speaker who is seeking out a love which does not strive to confine her.

In ‘I Am Not Yours,’ Teasdale takes a slightly different approach to an unrequited love poem. She addresses someone who loves her, or claims to love her, and tells them that she is not theirs. She is not theirs, but she does long to be loved and “Lost as a candle lit at noon.”

I am not yours, not lost in you,

Not lost, although I long to be

Lost as a candle lit at noon,

Lost as a snowflake in the sea.

#3
PDF Guide
Nationality: English
Emotion: Love for Her
"> 96/100

Never Seek to Tell thy Love

by William Blake

‘Never Seek to Tell thy Love’ by William Blake describes one man’s choice to reveal his true feelings to his “love” and the failure of that effort.

‘Never Seek to Tell thy Love’ describes why sometimes it’s better to keep quiet and refrain from sharing one’s emotions and love. It’s possible that when these feelings are shared that they won’t be reciprocated. That is going to be far more painful than keeping them to themselves.

Never seek to tell thy love

Love that never told can be 

For the gentle wind does move

Silently invisibly

#4
PDF Guide
98
94
"> 94/100

Sonnet 87

by William Shakespeare

Read Shakespeare’s Sonnet 87, ‘Farewell, thou art too dear for my possessing,’ with a summary and complete analysis of the poem.

In ‘Sonnet 87,’ the speaker addresses the Fair Youth, a young man who has mixed feelings of love and affection. He tells this young man that he loves him but at the same time, he’s aware that it’s unlikely that they’re ever going to have the kind of relationship that he wants most.

Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing,

And like enough thou know'st thy estimate,

The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing;

My bonds in thee are all determinate.

#5
PDF Guide
65
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
"> 93/100

Love’s Deity

by John Donne

‘Love’s Deity’ by John Donne is a complex and beautiful poem that delves into the evolution of love. The poet explores its meaning and role have changed over time

This beautiful poem centers on the theme of unrequited love. Through this lens, the poem explores the emotional suffering inherent in loving someone who doesn't return the feeling. This poem is a great example of the ways that poets handle topics like unrequited love.

I long to talk with some old lover's ghost,

Who died before the god of love was born.

I cannot think that he, who then lov'd most,

#6
PDF Guide
64
Nationality:
Themes:
66
Emotions:
Topics:
66
Form:
"> 92/100

Love Armed

by Aphra Behn

‘Love Armed’ warns the reader against falling under the embittering and tyrannical control of love.

Behn’s poem shares a grim view of love, portraying it as a malignant emotion that preys on people's sincere affections. Left with a broken heart, the speaker realizes love is not a mutual exchange, but a selfish competition in which there is a victor and a loser. The poem essentially cautions that when feelings aren't reciprocated, it can leave one in an emotional ruin. For such anguished souls love can lose all association with beauty and hope, becoming instead a persistent source of pain.

Love in Fantastic Triumph sat,   Whilst Bleeding Hearts around him flowed,   For whom Fresh pains he did Create,   Love in Fantastic Triumph sat, Whilst Bleeding Hearts around him flowed, For whom Fresh pains he did Create, And strange Tyrannic power he showed; And strange Tyrannic power he showed;

#7
PDF Guide
67
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Forms:
Genre:
"> 91/100

Maud Muller

by John Greenleaf Whittier

‘Maud Muller’ by John Greenleaf Whittier is a classic narrative ballad that recounts how the poor peasant, Maud, and an urban judge fantasize about getting married and living together. However, neither of them ever takes action, which fills their lives with regret.

Maud Muller and the judge's different social standings may create the boundaries that make their love an unrequited one, but their idealized perceptions of what might have been fuel the conflict in this poem.

God pity them both! and pity us all,

Who vainly the dreams of youth recall.

For of all sad words of tongue or pen,

The saddest are these: “It might have been!”

#8
PDF Guide
25
Nationality:
Theme:
Emotion:
Topics:
Form:
"> 90/100

Life in a Love

by Robert Browning

‘Life in a Love’ by Robert Browning is an obsessive love poem in which a speaker tells the person they’re in love with that no matter how many times they’re torn down; they’re always going to get back up. 

Unrequited love is the most important topic at work in this poem. The speaker is dealing with a life-long issue - the person they love does not love them in return.

Escape me?

Never—

Beloved!

While I am I, and you are you,

#9
PDF Guide
Nationality: English
Form: Quatrain
Genre: Lyric
"> 89/100

The Secret

by John Clare

‘The Secret’, a poem by the English poet John Clare speaks on a speaker’s secrecy of feelings concerning a lady. This piece glorifies the beauty of the lady and the speaker’s dedication to her.

In ‘The Secret,’ the speaker describes keeping his love a secret from someone he cares greatly for. The speaker has to contend with that love for the rest of time, reflecting it onto other people and things forever.

I loved thee, though I told thee not,

Right earlily and long,

Thou wert my joy in every spot,

My theme in every song.

#10
PDF Guide
82
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
Genres:
"> 87/100

The Spring

by Thomas Carew

‘The Spring’ by Thomas Carew is a poem about unrequited love in spring. The poet mourns the fact that no matter the season, his beloved does not love him.

One of the most important themes in this piece is unrequited love. The speaker, who is in a jubilant mood appreciating the beauty of spring season, becomes rather discouraged and heartbroken by the fact that his beloved is still cold and passive towards his feelings.

Now that the winter's gone, the earth hath lost

Her snow-white robes, and now no more the frost

Candies the grass, or casts an icy cream

Upon the silver lake or crystal stream;

#11
PDF Guide
75
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
"> 87/100

When You Are Old

by William Butler Yeats

William Butler Yeats’ poem ‘When You Are Old’ is directly addressed to his lover, most probably Maud Gonne who was an Irish revolutionary.

In this short poem by W.B. Yeats the speaker addresses someone whose youthful now but will eventually be “grey and full of sleep.” He tells this person that sometime in the future they will look back on their life and “one man” who “loved the pilgrim soul in you.”

When you are old and grey and full of sleep,

And nodding by the fire, take down this book,

And slowly read, and dream of the soft look

Your eyes had once, and of their shadows deep;

#12
PDF Guide
86
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
Genres:
"> 86/100

After

by Philip Bourke Marston

‘After’ by Marston captures the eternal ache of loss, where brief joys transition to lasting sorrow, reflecting on grief’s permanence.

Another important theme of Marston’s ‘After’ is unrequited love. The love story of the speaker and his loved one never reached its fruition. From the very beginning and till the end, the speaker goes on recounting the things he misses the most.

A LITTLE time for laughter,

— A little time to sing,

— A little time to kiss and cling,

And no more kissing after.

#13
PDF Guide
37
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
"> 86/100

Because I Liked You Better

by A. E. Housman

‘Because I Liked You Better’ by A. E. Housman is a love poem that taps on the theme of unrequited love. Like his “A Shropshire Lad” poems, it also touches on the theme of death.

In ‘Because I Liked You Better,’ the speaker hints at the poet’s own sexuality. It went unpublished during the poet’s lifetime but has since become well-known among lovers of Housman’s work. The speaker describes following his lover’s directive—to put them out of his mind and carry on with his life.

Because I liked you better

Than suits a man to say,

It irked you, and I promised

To throw the thought away.

#14
PDF Guide
77
Nationality:
Themes:
Emotions:
Topics:
Form:
Genres:
"> 86/100

La Belle Dame sans Merci

by John Keats

‘La Belle Dame sans Merci’ by John Keats is an intriguing narrative that explores death, decay, and love with a supernatural aura.

In 'La Belle Dame sans Merci,' unrequited love forms the backdrop against which the narrative unfolds. The knight's existence is permeated by the ache of longing for a love that remains unattainable. His physical and emotional deterioration, depicted through his withering state, reflects the torment of unrequited affection. The lady's sudden disappearance, abandoning him to his pain and despair, shows the stark impact of his unfulfilled love. Despite his yearning, he cannot have her and remains trapped in the torment of all-consuming unrequited love.

O what can ail thee, knight-at-arms,

Alone and palely loitering?

The sedge has withered from the lake,

And no birds sing.

#15
PDF Guide
Nationality: English
Emotion: Hopelessness
Form: Quatrain
"> 85/100

Appeal

by Anne Brontë

Brontë’s ‘Appeal’ distills profound emotions of sorrow and longing into a plea for relief from life’s burdens, showcasing the power of simplicity in poetry.

In ‘Appeal,’ Brontë’s speaker describes how exhausted she is and how “sick of woe.” She’s living a lonely and heavy life, one that she’s ready to shake off. She asks the listener if they won’t “come to” her and relieve her suffering.

Oh, I am very weary, Though tears no longer flow; My eyes are tires of weeping, My heart is sick of woe;

Access Poetry PDF Guides
for this Poem

Complete Poetry PDF Guide

Perfect Offline Resource

Covers Everything You Need to Know

One-pager 'snapshot' PDF

Great Offline Resource

Gateway to deeper understanding

870+ Reviews

Close the CTA