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Tag: climate change

Featured Poetry

Mark Hammerschick – Permafrostedness Rising

April 24, 2022April 21, 2022 Nicholas Trandahl

"Permafrostedness Rising" is a tragic poem written from the perspective of native arctic people, detailing a world altered by climate change.

Tagged climate, climate change, environment, global warming, landscape, loss, nature, Poem, poet, PoetryLeave a comment
Laura Schaffer
Featured Poetry

Laura Schaffer – Evening

June 6, 2021June 4, 2021 Nicholas Trandahl

Laura Scahffer's haunting and lovely poem delves into the challenges of place and setting, flipping the theme of a bucolic idyll on its head.

Tagged climate, climate change, evening, landscape, nature, place, road, settingLeave a comment
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TOP POSTS

  • Mary Oliver - Wild Geese
    Mary Oliver - Wild Geese
  • Pablo Neruda - The Sea
    Pablo Neruda - The Sea
  • John O'Donohue - Beannacht / Blessing
    John O'Donohue - Beannacht / Blessing
  • What is Love? Love is a Verb - bell hooks
    What is Love? Love is a Verb - bell hooks
  • Mary Oliver - When Death Comes
    Mary Oliver - When Death Comes
  • Florence Scovel Shinn and the Game of Love
    Florence Scovel Shinn and the Game of Love
  • David Whyte - The Bell and the Blackbird
    David Whyte - The Bell and the Blackbird
  • Rebecca Solnit's Blue of Distance
    Rebecca Solnit's Blue of Distance
  • Nansen Kills the Cat - Koun Yamada
    Nansen Kills the Cat - Koun Yamada
  • Carol Barrett - Esther Talks to Her Unborn Child
    Carol Barrett - Esther Talks to Her Unborn Child

- BOOK BITS -

  • May Sarton
    Like Silt in a Flowing Stream – May Sarton on Solitude and Clutter
    May Sarton's Journal of a Solitude is the upshot of a journey into herself, into simplification and self-examination.
  • E.E. Cummings
    E.E. Cummings – Let It Go—The
    E.E. Cummings reflects on the necessity of clearing, of letting go of the things we cling to, in order to make way for love.
  • Tallu Schuyer Quinn
    Normal Days – A Tribute to the Ordinary From the Far Edge of Life
    After a glioblastoma diagnosis, Tallu Schuyler Quinn wrote about what dying meant to her body, mind and heart in this series of moving essays.
  • Padraig O Tuama
    In the Name of the Stranger – Pádraig Ó Tuama on the Language of The Troubles
    Poet and theologian Pádraig Ó Tuama reflects on the use of the word 'trouble' in Irish language, and its relationship to grief and mourning.
  • John O Donohue
    The Most Real and Creative Form of Human Presence: John O’Donohue on Soul Friendship
    Ancient Celtic tradition upheld soul-friendships and the potential for inner growth that they teased out.


- POETRY-

  • Carol Barrett – Esther Talks to Her Unborn Child
    Poet Carol Barrett's poem is spoken in the voice of biblical Queen Esther, from the Tanakh or Old Testament Book of Esther.
  • Guadalupe Salgado Partida – Nearing Heaven
    Guadalupe Salgado Partida, with her poem "Nearing Heaven", tilts our eyes skyward, just as the eyes of the poem's narrator when she asks her father about God.
  • Laura Johnson – To the Daughter I Never Had
    Iowa poet Laura Johnson's "To the Daughter I Never Had" is a heart-rending work of what could have been, of loss, absence, and missed opportunities.
  • Gina Ferrara – Along Its Course
    New Orleans poet Gina Ferrara writes a poem of awareness, inevitability, permanence, and nature, the lines of which are gathered around the shores of a sluggish river.
  • Anya Smith – Mountain Messaged Erotica
    Anya Smith's three-part sequence poem, "Mountain Messaged Erotica", is narrative rife with outdoorsy rustic goodness and passion.
 

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