Feeds:
Posts
Comments
 . 
[ with 3 poems by Marilyn Hedgpeth ]
 . 
The Cross and the Carpenter Bees
 . 
They haul the worn wooden cross
from the depths of the church,
into the light of the sanctuary,
to make ready for its days
of Lenten pageantry, draped in purple.
 . 
It’s oddly riddled with holes, I notice,
as if shot through, front and back,
which no one recalls from last year
when it was confined to the basement
soon after Easter.
 . 
So, I stay watchful, keep my eyes open
while voicing prayers of penitence,
confessions of mortality,
while each person’s forehead is marked
with a dirty smudge of ash
as the organ drones.
 . 
Amidst this solemn ritual,
one by one they begin to emerge:
hibernating carpenter bees
rising lazily like sleepers waking
from tombs bored deep
into the marrow of the wood,
to stretch cramped wings.
 . 
Marilyn Turner Hedgpeth
from Alenda Lux, Warren Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2026 by Ingram P. Hedgpeth
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Crows Playing in the Snow
 . 
The first snowfall in 1,038 days,
barely a dusting, a sifting,
like powdered sugar on a cake.
The postman drives boldly, undeterred,
yet walks gingerly over crunchy grass,
carefully up slippery steps
to deliver a handful of cards,
catalogues, and holiday chachka.
 . 
In a vacant lot down the way,
crows are playing in the snow.
Nose up, flaps down, they skid to a halt,
rattling as they touch down awkwardly,
black on white.
 . 
An elderly driver ventures out slowly,
unable to discern between
salt, slag, and black ice.
He creeps and swerves,
brake lights casting red reflections.
 . 
Meanwhile, crows are playing in the snow,
arching their mighty wings,
they laugh out loud as they make dark
snow angels with their shadows,
black on white.
 . 
A passing car speeds up,
tossing its top-knot of snow,
blizzarding those in its wake.
 . 
Nearby, crows are playing in the snow,
hopscotching on crows’ feet to create
hatched patterns on a blank canvas.
They caw to their friends
to come out and joint them.
I scramble to find my boots.
 . 
Marilyn Turner Hedgpeth
from Alenda Lux, Warren Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2026 by Ingram P. Hedgpeth
 . 
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Laughter Returns
 . 
so surprising
it startles me
our small group playing handbells
flubs a simple song
known by heart since cradle roll
Jesus Loves Me, This I Know
suddenly unrecognizable
causing us all to laugh so hard
we almost drop our bells
 . 
This last year
I had forgotten
the contagion of hearing others
chortle just over my shoulder
the catharsis of laughing off
blunders and clangers
the full-bodied posture
of knee-buckling joy
I had forgotten
before fear and grief
the music of communal happiness
 . 
Marilyn Turner Hedgpeth
from Alenda Lux, Warren Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2026 by Ingram P. Hedgpeth
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Last week a friend rang my doorbell to hand me this book, Alenda Lux, Latin for “cherish the light.” As he placed it in my hands, he told me the story of the poems and the poet, Marilyn, a dear family friend for decades, her sudden and unexpected death from an accident. He thought the poetry might speak some special message to me, but he confessed that it has been a hard year for him as well, not only this loss of a friend but also of family members and those he loved. A year of grief and sadness.
 . 
And then for a minute my friend and I ponder together the book’s title. What light might we hope to discover here? Is there any promise that out of death we may draw some connection to life? Reading these lines, will we lament or rejoice?
 . 
Marilyn had prepared this manuscript before her fatal accident in 2025, and her husband and children have insured that it be published in a beautiful volume, with evocative photography by Diana Greene. As a minister for twenty-four years, Marilyn Hedgpeth certainly must have sojourned in the realms of both hope and despair. Her poems do not feign ignorance of the darkness that can cloud the human soul, but they also never forsake the unceasing and unvanquishable light that desires to lift our spirits every hour, every day. Reading these poems, I am raised up. I am convinced there is a power larger than any pain of my own. Distant sometimes, but always drawing closer, I believe I hear the music of happiness.
 . 
✾  ✿  ❁
 . 
Marilyn Turner Hedgpeth published her first poetry collection, The Lightness of Reprieve, in 20224, and that same year published a collaboration with her writing group, White Fence. She earned a Master of Divinity from Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia and served as a Presbyterian Minister of Word and Sacrament for twenty-four years, seventeen of them at First Presbyterian Church in Durham, North Carolina. In her author’s notes accompanying the manuscript, she says the poems “coalesced from relationships past and present that have provided light (lux in Latin), strength, resilience, and hope to my life.” Her family, with the publication of the book, added a memoriam, including, “When we read these poems, we sense that Marilyn is still very present.” May it be so.
 . 
And in the book’s title poem, Marilyn reveals that her father originally wished for her, his first-born, to be named Alenda Lux.
 . 
Alenda Lux is available from Warren Publishing.
The Lightness of Reprieve is featured at Verse and Image HERE
 . 

Sessile Bellwort

 . 
❀    ❀    ❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Thank you for visiting Verse and Image:
. . . . . every Friday I present one or two poems I’ve read this week that particularly speak to me;
. . . . . on Saturdays I present one or two poems submitted by YOU, my readers.
 . 
If you would like to offer a poem for consideration, either by a favorite author or your own work, please view these GUIDELINES for Saturday Readers Share:
 . 
 . 
If you would like to receive an email each time a post appears, please SUBSCRIBE to Verse and Image using the button on the Home Page.
 . 
If you have a hard time finding the SUBSCRIBE button on this WordPress site, you can send me your email address and I will add you to the subscriber list. Send your request to
 . 
COMMENTS@GRIFFINPOETRY.COM
 . 
Thanks again for joining the conversation.
 . 
– Bill
 . 
IMG_1827
 . 

Henbit, Lamia amplexicaule

 . 

Taken from my monthly naturalist article for the Elkin Tribune, May 2026.
You are invited to join the ethnobotany hikes June 5 and June 6
at NC TRAIL DAYS!

 . 

Back towards the end of winter, before the first glimmer of spring, before your grass even dreamed of the roar of the mower, did you notice odd sprigs of green appearing in your yard? Around the mailbox, at the edges of the garden, places where well-behaved plants aren’t usually invited to grow? There is an entire menagerie of little herbs looking for an opportunity to get a head start on blooming, some native and some non-native (and hush, don’t call them weeds!). And some of them are good to eat!
 . 

Start with henbit. This hardy non-minty mint with lovely tiny purple flowers is native to Europe but is now found throughout the eastern US. It’s possible that the colonists brought it with them on purpose to feed chickens! If you drive out through the farms in Zephyr before spring planting, you’ll see fields covered with a lilac haze – henbit blooming, along with its cousins deadnettle and creeping charlie. I’ve even seen henbit flowers in the Rec Center parking lot in January. And if you pick the leaves while they’re tender, they make a tasty addition to a tossed salad.
 . 

And toss in some corn salad. No golden kernels involved: this little plant is a native leafy green that gets its name because it grows between the rows of grain and corn. The leaves remain edible even as the plant gets lanky and leggy, and they taste like butterhead lettuce. Here are three questions you should ask yourself, though, before you forage for local wild edibles: #1 – Am I 100% certain of my identification? Some plants in the carrot family are spicy and herby, others are deadly poison. #2 – If I pick this, how will it affect the experience of anyone who comes after me? NEVER remove plants from public parks, and get permission on private land. #3 – How am I affecting the local ecosystem? Bugs, birds, and critters need to live, too! (And I’ll throw in question #4 – Do dogs poop here?)

 . 
“SOME FEED US, SOME HEAL US, SOME KILL US.”
Ethnobotany is the study of how different cultures use plants. For food? For medicine? In rites and rituals? I am hosting two ethnobotany hikes on the E&A Nature Trail for NC Trail Days 2026 in Elkin, NC:
June 5 and June 6
9:00 AM
Meet at Elkin Rec Center to walk the E&A Nature Trail
I hope to see you there!
 . 

NC TRAIL DAYS in Elkin and Jonesville is June 4-7, 2026. Find the full schedule of events at https://www.nctraildays.com/schedule.

 . 

Beaked Corn Salad, Valerianella radiata

 . 

LINKS:
June 5 Naturalist Hike 
June 6 Naturalist Hike
NC Trail Days full schedule of events 
Elkin Valley Trails Association
Contact Bill Griffin, EVTA naturalist, at ElkinNatureHikes@gmail.com

.

Henbit

[photo by Andre Tew — thanks!]

 . 
[ a sampling of winning poems by Gregory Lobas, Hannah Ringler, Chapman Hood Frazier, Scott Owens, Lora E. Hawkins  – May 16, 2026 at Weymouth Center ]
 . 
Moon Over Gaza
 . 
is not the moon over me.
I have had my supper,
 . 
and now I watch a swift scissor the air,
wings shaped like lunar crescents,
one rising, one setting
as it flips on its axis
in pursuit of its evening
meal, dusk-colored plumage
bleeding into a southern summer night.
 . 
Half a world away, my son
distributes food in a land
that is hard to love,
among people who do not love him,
a land where locusts no longer
swarm in a biblical effusion of life,
but flies amass through a prodigy
 . 
of death, and survivors teem
over palettes of aid boxes
driven to the edge of insect-
frenzy, children gleaning
lentils spilled into the dirt
like lots cast to see
who lives and who dies.
 . 
Soldiers of another stripe
fire machine guns
into the pre-dawn sky,
echoing across the landscape
like a call to prayer. A reminder
of the governance of the absolute.
 . 
Buildings bleed
into rubble. Rubble bleeds
into dust. Dust into hunger.
Hunger into gall clinging
to the back of the throat,
the body’s taste of sorrow.
 . 
And, above it all, the moon hangs
like one severed wing of a swift.
My son (I imagine him facing homeward)
would see it set into the barren hillocks
that lie humped beyond his camp
like so many sheet-covered bodies,
while I face east to watch it rise
over a grassy meadow alive
with the scratch of katydids,
the tilted crescent bleeding
its pale light over all the earth
 . 
Gregory Lobas
Poet Laureate Award
 . 
✾  ✾
 . 
 . 
Gregory Lobas’ book, Left of Center, won the 2022 Dogfish Head Poetry Prize. A 2026 Best of the Net nominee, his work can be found in New Ohio Review, Tar River Poetry, Cimarron Review, Vox Populi, Susurrus, and many other journals.
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
tents hawking fireworks
these missiles, at least, only sound
and weeping stars
 . 
Hannah Ringler
Bloodroot Haiku Award; Honorable Mention
 . 
✾  ✾
 . 
 . 
Hannah Ringler is a poet, gardener, freelance editor, and preschool mom living in Durham, North Carolina. She composes poetry at red lights and standing at the kitchen sink. By night, she is the State Coordinator for the Poetry in Plain Sight Program of the North Carolina Poetry Society.
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Our 50th Solstice
 . 
Our wedding rings two spirals in opposite directions.
Each defining the other, each apart together.
 . 
I first followed you through the back field, your hair golden
as broom straw in sunlight beneath a cloudless southside sky.
 . 
Even then I knew it was you I had to live with. Love at first sight
I had always thought a stupid myth I now had come to believe in.
 . 
On our first Thanksgiving, you crossed the Appalachians with your sister
to my apartment where we were first alone together.
 . 
The scent of heliotrope left on the pillow and sandalwood
on the braided leather bracelets we exchanged.
 . 
I followed the roadmap of your body from the green undulating waves
of the Outer Banks to the narrow cobblestone back streets of Rome.
 . 
Each child’s birth a seeded light of our ancestors, growing through us like
winter ivy or an ocean wave rising towards some inevitable shore.
 . 
I massaged your back in the dim-lit hospital room as you birthed our son
and steadied you as our daughter slipped into this world.
 . 
A slow learner, now after 50 years, I’ve finally realized that love is a seed of
mitochondrial light, something I carry from those who’ve come
 . 
before. It shines through this oculus of our lives, a commitment
that opens time’s spiral until a death parts us. This is the heart of solstice
 . 
beyond the known into the unknown. The time after as before
when we may find each other again in an afterlife not of our making.
 . 
Chapman Hood Frazier
Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love; First Place
 . 
✾  ✾
 . 
 . 
Chapman Hood Frazier’s The Lost Books of the Bestiary was published in 2023. His work has appeared in The Virginia Quarterly Review, The Southern Poetry Review, The South Carolina Review and other publications. Currently a Professor Emeritus from James Madison University, he lives in Rice, Virginia.
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Churchyard Playground, Cokesbury SC
 . 
Beneath the trees the children play
surrounded by the swirl of leaves.
They waste another careless day
spending time doing as they please,
unafraid what things may fall away.
 . 
Please do not scold, please nothing say
of the loss that we feel today.
Such knowledge will fill no need
for those beneath the trees.
 . 
Leave them to it! Let them play!
Give them peace at least another day.
They do not need to know that though their days
go slow, they go. Don’t make them see
that days will come when they will be
still beneath the trees.
 . 
Scott Owens
Charles Edward Eaton Award, Sonnet or Traditional Form; Honorable Mention
 . 
✾  ✾
 . 
 . 
Poet Laureate of Hickory, North Carolina, Scott Owens is author of twenty-four poetry collections, recipient of awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Pushcart Prize Anthology, among others. He is Professor of Poetry at Lenoir Rhyne University, owns and operates Taste Full Beans Coffeehouse, and coordinates Poetry Hickory.
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
The Second Law of Thermodynamics
 . 
In 11th grade
I am told
by Austin Roberts,
 . 
that according to physics,
there is no concept
of cold,
simply an
absence
of heat.
 . 
1,500 miles,
two decades,
and several
heartsmashings later,
 . 
my hand finds its way
under the covers to the small
of my husband’s bare back.
 . 
Oh, it’s cold
he says
scootching away.
Not cold,
I think, as an echo
of a half-remembered
thought.
 . 
My hands
just lack
the heat of you.
 . 
Lora E. Hawkins
In Defense of Science Award; Second Place
 . 
✾  ✾
 . 
 . 
Lora Hawkins is an assistant professor at Appalachian State. Most recently, her work has appeared in English Journal, Anthology of Kansas City Writers, In the Black and in the Red, Pinesong, Poets for Peace, and The Nature of Our Times. She holds credentials from Columbia, Brown, and Warren Wilson College.
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
All selections are from PINESONG 2026, Volume 62, the annual anthology of the North Carolina Poetry Society. © 2026 NCPS.
 . 
 . 
The North Carolina Poetry Society is an inclusive, expansive community of writers, readers, teachers, and friends that spans the state’s 100 counties and extends throughout the United States. Its mission is to support, promote, and celebrate poetry. Thank you to the entire Board of NCPS – it takes all of you to bring these contests, gatherings, and publications into being. Special thanks to Sherry Thrasher, Pinesong Editor and Adult Contest Coordinator; Kim Lane, Student Contest Coordinator; Kevin Watson and Press 53, interior layout and cover design for Pinesong as well as sponsor of the Poet Laureate Contest; Kashiana Singh, NCPS President and behind-the-scenes magic elf who makes sure warp and weft are woven into beauty; Chad Knuth, program planner; and all the proof readers, copy editors, book schleppers, goody providers (I’m looking at you, Joan) and enthusiastic supporters of Awards Day each May.
 . 

[photo by Andre Tew]

 . 
❀    ❀    ❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
The North Carolina Poetry Society conducts twelve contest for adults each year. The submission period opens on December 1, with a deadline of February 1. Winners are invited to attend and read their poem at Sam Ragan Awards Day at Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities (Southern Pines) each May. Check HERE for contest guidelines and details.
 . 
Winning poems are published in the anthology Pinesong. If you would like to purchase a copy ($10), or if you are a NCPS member and would like to request your complimentary copy, please contact Membership Vice President Joan Barasovska:  msjoan9@gmail.com.
 . 
The NCPS Adult Contests are:
 . 
Poet Laureate Award
Sponsored by Press 53; Final Judge: NC Poet Laureate Jaki Shelton Green. Open to poets currently residing in North Carolina.
 . 
Alice Osborn Award
Sponsored by Alice Osborn; Poems in any form, any style, written by adults for children 2 to 12 years of age.
 . 
Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award
Endowed by David Manning; Any form, any style, on the theme of love.
 . 
Katherine Kennedy McIntyre Light Verse Award
Sponsored by Kashiana Singh; Light verse in any form, any style, including limericks
Mary Ruffin Poole American Heritage Award
Endowed by Pepper Worthington; Any form, any style, on the theme of American heritage, sibling-hood, or nature.
Poetry of Courage Award
Endowed by Ann Campanella; Any form, any style, on the theme of courage or crisis
 . 
Bruce Lader Poetry of Witness Award
Sponsored by Doug Stuber; Any form, any style, addressing contemporary events or issues
 . 
Jean Williams Poetry of Disability, Disease, and Healing Award
Endowed by Priscilla Webster-Williams; Any form, any style, on the theme of disability, disease, and healing.
 . 
Bloodroot Haiku Award
Sponsored by Bill Griffin; Contemporary English language haiku (untitled).
 . 
Charles Edward Eaton Award
Endowed by an anonymous friend of Charles Edward Eaton; Sonnet or other traditional form, maximum of 50 lines.
 . 
Robert Golden Award
Endowed by Nexus Poets and Linda Golden; Any form, any style.
 . 
In Defense of Science Poetry Award
Sponsored by Garrett Sharpe; Any form or style that engages with scientific ideas across all disciplines—climatology, oceanography, microbiology, chemistry, physics, astronomy, biology, and beyond.
 . 
 . 
 . 
 . 
❀    ❀    ❀    ❀    ❀
 . 
Thank you for visiting Verse and Image:
. . . . . every Friday I present one or two poems I’ve read this week that particularly speak to me;
. . . . . some Saturdays I present one or two poems submitted by YOU, my readers.
 . 
If you would like to offer a poem for consideration, either by a favorite author or your own work, please view these GUIDELINES for Saturday Readers Share:
 . 
 . 
If you would like to receive an email each time a post appears, please SUBSCRIBE to Verse and Image using the button on the Home Page.
 . 
If you have a hard time finding the SUBSCRIBE button on this WordPress site, you can send me your email address and I will add you to the subscriber list. Send your request to
 . 
COMMENTS@GRIFFINPOETRY.COM
 . 
Thanks again for joining the conversation.
 . 
– Bill
 . 
 . 
 .
 .
 . 
 . 
 . 
 . 
 .
 . 
 . 
Doughton Park Tree 2025-07-10