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Tag: homage

Featured Poetry

Patrice Bavos – Sedona Prayer

May 15, 2022May 12, 2022 Nicholas Trandahl

New Jersey poet Patrice Bavos offers a gracious praise poem of a spiritual place with her lovely "Sedona Prayer".

Tagged desert, history, homage, nature, ode, Poem, poet, Poetry, prayer, sacred3 Comments
Allen Ginsberg
Uncategorized

Allen Ginsberg – A Supermarket in California

August 11, 2021August 11, 2021 Vanessa Able

Allen Ginsberg's homage to Walt Whitman is a colorful, visionary encounter in a supermarket in Berkeley one night.

Tagged america, Beat Poetry, california, cultural critique, dream, homage, legacy, Poem, Poetry, queer poetry, vision, Walt WhitmanLeave a comment
Robert Bly
Uncategorized

Robert Bly – When William Stafford Died

July 28, 2021July 28, 2021 Vanessa Able

After the death of the poet William Stafford in 1993, his friend Robert Bly wrote this tribute against the image of water flowing down the rocks of Montana gullies.

Tagged acceptance, Affection, current, Death, flow, friendship, homage, Poetry, Stream, tributeLeave a comment
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TOP POSTS

  • Mary Oliver - Wild Geese
    Mary Oliver - Wild Geese
  • John O'Donohue - Beannacht / Blessing
    John O'Donohue - Beannacht / Blessing
  • Mary Oliver - When Death Comes
    Mary Oliver - When Death Comes
  • Pablo Neruda - The Sea
    Pablo Neruda - The Sea
  • What is Love? Love is a Verb - bell hooks
    What is Love? Love is a Verb - bell hooks
  • Ellen White Rook - On Waking
    Ellen White Rook - On Waking
  • Issa - This Dewdrop World
    Issa - This Dewdrop World
  • Kahlil Gibran - Fear
    Kahlil Gibran - Fear
  • Shunryu Suzuki's Waterfall - On Separation and Death
    Shunryu Suzuki's Waterfall - On Separation and Death
  • Gary Snyder - For the Children
    Gary Snyder - For the Children

- BOOK BITS -

  • Barbara Brown Taylor
    The Path that Goes Nowhere – Barbara Brown Taylor on the Practice of Labyrinth Walking
    Barbara Brown Taylor reflects on her own experience of Labyrinth-walking and the significance of the path without a destination.
  • David Hinton
    What Can the Earth’s Crisis Teach Us About Ourselves? David Hinton’s Tao of Ecology
    David Hinton on what Taoism can teach us about Deep Ecology and how we can reconnect with our own ancient Paleolithic roots.
  • Virginia Woolf
    ‘When the Lights of Health Go Down’- Virginia Woolf on Being Ill
    Virginia Woolf on our relationship to illness, its potential spiritual value, and the mysterious intelligence of the body.
  • Alan Watts
    Life Includes All Opposites – Alan Watts on the Oneness of the Tao
    The psychology of acceptance and the understanding 'that there is only one ultimate reality or source of activity in the universe.'
  • The Sacred Pulse of Night and Day
    Deborah Eden Tull explores the experience of darkness and how it can be a transformative and expansive human experience.


- POETRY-

  • Ellen White Rook – On Waking
    Here at The Dewdrop, we can't help but to be reminded of the late great Mary Oliver when reading Ellen White Rook's tremendous "On Waking".
  • David Cravens – American Zen
    David Cravens' epic poem "American Zen" counts as one of the more ambitious works ever published in The Dewdrop.
  • Kahlil Gibran
    Kahlil Gibran – Fear
    Kahlil Gibran's poem on the fear of dissipation is a call to faith, to trust in the oceanic nature of the life-manifesting force.
  • Will Simescu – Agrapha
    Will Simescu's "Agrapha" reveals a search for holiness, contrasting the gritty details of reality with imagery from the life of Christ.
  • Emily Fernandez – Please begin
    The Dewdrop's first Featured Poem of 2023, is an offering from poet Emily Fernandez. It serves as a perfect introduction to the year.
 

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