55 Best 2nd Grade Poems To Delight Young Poets


One of the best ways to teach students the power of words is through poetry. This list of fun poems will engage 2nd graders in serious, silly, and sentimental poems they can analyze and learn from.

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1. Second Grade Superstars by Anonymous

Second Grade Superstars by Anonymous poems for second graders

Themes: School, Confidence

Literary Devices: Repetition, Punctuation

Use this poem at the beginning of the school year to engage students in thinking about the year ahead. It also has rhyming lines that students can identify to start to talk about structure.

2. The Porcupine by Ogden Nash

Any hound a porcupine nudges/Can’t be blamed for harboring grudges

Themes: Humor, animals

Literary Devices: Rhyme

This silly poem about a porcupine is a great one for vocabulary (grudge, nudge). Discuss how the poet creates a small scene in just four lines.

3. At the Zoo by William Makepeace Thackeray

First I saw the white bear, then I saw the black

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Repetition, Rhyme

Repeated lines and rhyming words make this poem a great one to read aloud. See if students can read it without their voices moving along with the cadence.

4. Mary’s Lamb by Sarah Josepha Hale

Mary had a little lamb/It’s fleece was white as snow

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Narrative, Rhyme

Nursery rhymes are a great way to introduce kids to poetry using familiar rhymes. In “Mary’s Lamb” you can teach one, two, or even three stanzas quite easily.

5. I Taught My Cat To Clean My Room by Kenn Nesbitt

I Taught My Cat to Clean My Room by Kenn Nesbitt

Themes: Animals, Responsibility, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme

This silly poem is a great entry point to poetry because students can analyze the poem for rhyming words and syllables, and they can analyze what’s happening, including the joke at the end.

6. A Silly Crow by Andrea Crawford

Here is a very silly crow/Upon her head there is a bow

Themes: Humor, animals

Literary Devices: Rhyme

Use this poem to inspire students to write their own poem about one thing. They can start their poems with “Here is a very …” and go from there.

7. Snakes by Mariah Deitrick

A snake can glide from side to side/They’re really long and hard to hide

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Rhyme

What nonfiction facts are incorporated into this poem? Students can read it and underline the facts that the poet included and how they incorporated some jokes too.

8. An ancient pond! by Matsuo Basho

An ancient pond!/With the sound from the water/Of the frog as it plunges in

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Enjambment (continuing sentences)

Such a short poem, but it makes a splash! Talk about the vocabulary (ancient, plunges). Then, talk about what sound the poet is writing about.

9. The Crocodile by Lewis Carroll

The Crocodile by Lewis Carroll, an example of poems for second graders

Themes: Animals, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme

Poetry wouldn’t be the same without Lewis Carroll. This poem is a fun one to read aloud, to show students how, even if the poem uses some words we don’t (“doth”), we can still understand a lot from the tone and atmosphere the poem creates.

10. My Dog Does My Homework by Kenn Nesbitt

My dog does his homework/at home every night

Themes: Pets, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Enjambment

You don’t have to wait until a student says their dog ate their homework to bring this poem into your classroom. Brainstorm all the problems with having your dog do your homework, then review the poem and talk about which problems made it into the poem.

11. My Big Fat Cat by Christian M. Mitewu

I own a big fat cat/The fattest for miles around

Themes: Animals, Humor

Literary Devices: Hyperbole, Rhyme

Another homework poem, read this one alongside “My Dog Does My Homework,” and talk about how two poets approached the same subject.

12. The Parakeets by Alberto Blanco

They talk all day/and when it starts to get dark/they lower their voices

Themes: Pets, Human nature

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Punctuation

Teach students how authors create tiny scenes with each stanza of this poem about a talkative bird.

13. The Pasture by Robert Frost

The Pasture by Robert Frost

Themes: Nature

Literary Devices: Punctuation, Enjambment

Robert Frost isn’t just for older readers. This inviting poem about cleaning the pasture and bringing in a calf is a great poem to read aloud, or have higher readers read and analyze it.

14. How Not To Have To Dry the Dishes by Shel Silverstein

If you have to dry the dishes/(Such an awful boring chore)

Themes: Responsibility, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Punctuation

This poem’s structure, with the use of parentheses, is worth talking about. How do the parentheses add meaning? How does Shel Silverstein use them as an aside to the reader?

15. The Goops by Gelett Burgess

The meanest trick I ever knew/Was one I know you never do

Themes: Humor, Manners

Literary Devices: Rhyme

The Goops are a bunch of children that make mischief your students would never dream of! The Goop poems, like this one, are great for talking about the imagination that we can bring to poetry.

16. If I Were in Charge of the World by Judith Viorst

If I were in charge of the world/I’d cancel oatmeal

Themes: Imagination

Literary Devices: Repetition, Rhyme

With a repeated first line, “If I were in charge of the world …,” children’s author Judith Viorst imagines what she could do. After students read Viorst’s ideas, what would they do if they were in charge? Write a class poem with the same beginning line.

17. My Best Friend by Abby Jenkins

Black and white/Thick and furry/Fast as the wind

Themes: Pets

Literary Devices: Simile, Rhyme

This poem describes a furry best friend without ever naming what it is. What clues and details does the poet reveal that help the reader know what they’re talking about? Can students write a poem about something they love without mentioning the actual object of their affection?

18. Eletelephony by Laura Elizabeth Richards

Eletelephony by Laura Elizabeth Richards, poems for second graders

Themes: Animals, Absurdity

Literary Devices: Made up words, Rhyme

This fun-to-read-aloud poem plays with words in fun ways. Read it aloud during whole-group work, or challenge your higher readers to read it aloud in a poetry slam.

19. The Forest by Annette Wynne

The forest is a town of trees/Where they live quite at their ease

Theme: Nature

Literary Devices: Metaphor

Use this poem to teach ways that poets use comparisons to describe things, like a “town of trees.”

20. The Butterfly Ballad by Guy Belleranti

Butterfly starts as an egg/as an egg, as an egg

Themes: Nature, Life Cycle

Literary Devices: Repetition, Rhyme

Repeated words and phrases make this poem a “ballad” about the life cycle of a butterfly.

21. I Made a Meme This Morning by Kenn Nesbitt

I made a meme this morning/I posted it online

Themes: Modern life, Technology

Literary Devices: Rhyme

A fun poem about technology and internet literacy. Read this one to talk about what students should be thinking when they post online and capitalize on the rhythm to help students remember to think before they post.

22. In cold spring air by Reginald Gibbons

In cold/spring air the/white wisp–

Themes: Nature, Seasons

Literary Devices: Enjambment, Structure

The poet creates an interesting structure with their words in this poem. Talk about how the way the words are organized makes students think about the air and wisps of wind.

23. The Storm by Dorothy Aldis

The Storm by Dorothy Aldis.

Themes: Nature, Weather

Literary Devices: Rhyme

Descriptive words and phrases make this depiction of experiencing a storm take the reader right to the scene. Talk about the details that make the scene come to life.

24. Seashell by James Berry

Shell at my ear/Come share how I hear

Themes: Nature

Literary Devices: Personification, Simile

Study how the poet uses metaphor and description to explain what he hears inside a seashell.

25. A Jelly-Fish by Marianne Moore

Visible, Invisible/A fluctuating charm

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Structure

Look at images of jellyfish and read this poem. Talk about how Marianne Moore describes the jellyfish and how the poem might be written using more modern language.

26. Rain Sound by Lillian Morrison

At first its like drumming/as it patters down and stops

Themes: Rain, Nature

Literary Devices: Personification, Metaphor

This poem is great for introducing metaphors, like rain drumming and then sounding like an animal.

27. Nicknames by Kenn Nesbitt

My aunt calls me “Elizabeth”/My grandma calls me “Liz”

Themes: Names, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Contrast

A fun poem about all the nicknames for Elizabeth, and all the ways one kid is still called the wrong name. This is a fun poem to talk about names before students write poems about their own names and nicknames.

28. Dirt on My Shirt by Jeff Foxworthy

There’s dirt on my shirt/And leaves in my hair

Themes: Nature, Play

Literary Devices: Rhyme

The poet describes playing outside in this short poem. Students can talk about the way the poet describes playing outside and what he likes about the experience.

29. Tiger by Valerie Worth

The tiger/Has swallowed/a black sun.

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Enjambment, Imagery

This poem describes creative ways the tiger got his stripes and black eyes. Use it to inspire students to think about other ways animals could get their unique features. Then, they can write poems about animals they like.

30. Your Best by Barbara Vance

Your Best by Barbara Vance an example of poems for second graders

Themes: Encouragement

Literary Devices: Rhyme

This is a great poem to start the year or week with (or to read after a school break). Students can reflect on the message about doing your best and trying again.

31. Walking With My Iguana by Brian Moses

I’m walking/with my iguana.

Themes: Humor, Imagination

Literary Devices: Repetition

A silly poem about an iguana going for a walk. How does the poet combine factual information with silly details to create the story?

32. Magic Carpet by Shel Silverstein

You have a magic carpet/That will whiz you through the air

Themes: Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme

It’s not a poetry unit without Shel Silverstein. In this case, he imagines what could be with an ordinary carpet. What could students imagine for your class rug after reading this poem?

33. The Owl and the Pussy-Cat by Edward Lear

The owl and the pussy-cat went to sea/In a beautiful pea-green boat

Themes: Adventure

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Narrative

This is a classic poem that students may have already heard. It’s a great introduction to poems that tell a longer, shall we say, epic story.

34. The Tyger by William Blake

Tyger, Tyger, burning bright/In the forests of the night

Themes: Power of Nature

Literary Devices: Imagery, Rhetorical questions

This poem has advanced vocabulary (symmetry, immortal), and you can use one or more stanzas to teach students new words and talk about how the tiger was created. (Read it with “Tiger” by Valerie Worth to get two ideas on how tigers came about.)

35. The Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll

‘Twas brillig and the slithy toves/Did gyre and gimble in the wabe

Themes: Hero’s Journey, Imagination

Literary Devices: Made up language, Alliteration

“The Jabberwocky” is an advanced poem if you try to read and analyze it. But it’s a great poem to just listen to. Read this one aloud and ask students what they think about the energy and tone of the poem. It’s anything but serious.

36. The Quangle Wangle’s Hat by Edward Lear

On the top of the Crumpety Tree/The Quangle Wangle sat

Themes: Humor, Story

Literary Devices: Narrative, Hyperbole

Similar to “The Jabberwocky,” this poem is all about read-aloud. Read it and listen for the tone and how the silly words turn the poem into a fun auditory ride.

37. When the Teacher Isn’t Looking by Kenn Nesbitt

When the Teacher Isn’t Looking by Kenn Nesbitt

Themes: School, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme

Start the year with this poem, or read it as an instructional message before you take time off and students will have a substitute.

38. The Tale of Custard the Dragon by Ogden Nash

Belinda lived in a little white house/With a little black kitten and a little gray mouse

Themes: Animals, Imagination

Literary Devices: Simile, Rhyme

Another poem that tells a longer story. Read this poem and talk about what’s happening in each stanza.

39. For Sale by Shel Silverstein

One sister for sale!/One crying and spying young sister for sale

Themes: Sibling rivalry, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Questions

This is a quintessential Silverstein poem, with a relatable topic and fun approach. Students can talk about what is happening and the joke Silverstein has woven into the words.

40. The Land of Counterpane by Robert Louis Stevenson

When I was sick and lay a-bed/I had two pillows at my head

Themes: Imagination

Literary Devices: Rhyme

“The Land of Counterpane” has a structure that 2nd graders can analyze (AABB) and is about a topic that they will find familiar: a day spent home sick in bed.

41. Adventures of Isabel by Ogden Nash

Isabel met an enormous bear/Isabel, Isabel didn’t care

Themes: Adventure, Bravery

Literary Devices: Repetition, Imagery

A fairy tale within a poem, read “Adventures of Isabel” to describe literally what happens, and to talk about how the poem progresses from one silly scene to another.

42. Homework! Oh, Homework! by Jack Prelutsky

Homework! Oh homework!/I hate you. You stink.

Themes: Homework, Humor

Literary Devices: Hyperbole, Rhyme

What is elementary school poetry without Jack Prelutsky? “Homework! Oh Homework!” is a great way to start students on odes. They can read this ode to poetry, and write about something they either love or hate as much as Prelutsky hates homework.

43. Recipe for a Hippopotamus Sandwich by Shel Silverstein

Recipe for a Hippopotamus Sandwich by Shel Silverstein

Themes: Humor, Food

Literary Devices: Repetition, Rhyme

A hippo sandwich is classic Silverstein. Students can read this poem and draw an illustration to go with it to show how they interpret the poem.

44. Wynken, Blynken, and Nod by Eugene Field

Wynken, Blynken and Nod one night/Sailed off in a wooden shoe

Themes: Adventure, Nighttime

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Repetition

This is another poem that students may be familiar with from preschool or nursery rhyme readings. It’s also an epic tale of three kids who sail off in a wooden shoe. Approach this poem as the story of a journey. How does the poet create the nighttime atmosphere and events along their journey?

45. The Duck and the Kangaroo by Edward Lear

Said the duck to the kangaroo/’Good gracious, how you hop!’

Themes: Animals

Literary Devices: Narrative, Rhyme

This poem imagines interactions between different animals. Use one or more stanzas and read the poem to capture the cadence and the silly interactions between animals.

46. Casey at the Bat by Ernest Lawrence Thayer

The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day

Themes: Baseball, Defeat

Literary Devices: Imagery, Rhyme

This poem is perfect for kids who are obsessed with baseball, or for kids who think poetry is only about animals and seasons. “Casey at the Bat” is the epic poem about a baseball team, with lots of baseball vocabulary and scene building.

47. The Purple Cow by Gelett Burgess

I never saw a purple cow/I never hope to see one

Themes: Absurdity, Humor

Literary Devices: Rhyme

This catchy poem that doubles as a rhyme is great to quickly read and analyze during morning meeting or a mini-lesson. It also has a useful moral about maintaining perspective.

48. The Duel by Eugene Field

The gingham dog and the calico cat/Side by side on the table sat

Themes: Humor, Imagination

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Narrative

This poem is written in older English, so it’s good for a read-aloud. Talk about the vocabulary (duel, gingham, slept a wink), then talk about what’s happening in each stanza.

49. Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout Would Not Take the Garbage Out by Shel Silverstein

Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout/Would not take the garbage out/She’d scour the pots and scrape the pans

Themes: Responsibility, Humor

Literary Devices: Alliteration, Rhyme

One of the best Silverstein poems (in our opinion), this poem is silly, fun, and builds to an important moral about responsibility. It also uses alliteration to reinforce the read-aloud-ability typical of Silverstein’s poems.

50. The Spider and the Fly by Mary Howitt

“Will you walk to my parlor?” said the Spider to the Fly.

Themes: Vanity, Flattery

Literary Devices: Personification, Alliteration

The interaction between a spider and a fly creates a macabre poem about succumbing to flattery and vanity. Read it at Halloween time, or when you’re talking about dialogue and how authors use dialogue to move stories forward.

51. The Tale of the Sun and the Moon by Kenn Nesbitt

The sun was in his bathing suit/the moon in her pajamas

Themes: Relationships, Friendship

Literary Devices: Personification

This poem is a great example of personification. The sun and moon are both personified and described doing various activities around the house. Talk about why a poet would personify the sun and moon. How does it help communicate the poem’s message?

52. Clouds by Christina Rossetti

Clouds by Christina Rossetti, poems for second graders

Themes: Opportunity

Literary Devices: Rhyme, Repetition

Active poems like this are great to use during circle time. Have students listen to the poem and pretend they are the sheep walking or standing still. With older students, talk about what themes are in the poem; is this poem just about sheep or is the poet making a broader point?

53. The Acrobats by Shel Silverstein

I’ll swing/by my ankles/She’ll cling/to your knees

Themes: Fun, Humor

Literary Devices: Structure, Rhyme

A great example of how one rhyming sound can be carried through a poem (in this case the long ‘e’ sound in sneeze and breeze).

54. When Tillie Ate the Chili by Jack Prelutsky

When Tillie ate the chilli/She erupted from her seat

Themes: Humor

Literary Devices: Hyperbole, Rhyme

This poem is an introduction to hyperbole, with dramatic descriptions of what happens to Tillie after she eats a bowl of spicy chili and “erupts.”

55. The Crocodile’s Toothache by Shel Silverstein

The crocodile/went to the dentist/And sat down in the chair

Themes: Humor, Absurdity

Literary Devices: Narrative

A short story in a stanza, read this poem and talk about how Silverstein builds suspense from the first line to the last.

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These 2nd grade poems are great for all reading levels. Spark a love for poetry by sharing these during your ELA lessons!



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