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[ 3 poems by Liza Wolff-Francis ]
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The land before we came
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i.
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My friend Shelly gets a text
from a woman she’s dating
down south with a picture
of a bullfrog the size of my
hand, caught in a bucket.
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Its circle ear, a tympanum,
its habitat, the sound of a waltz,
its body, green camouflage.
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As a teenager, I wore combat boots,
though never camouflage.
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Camouflage for people is military wardrobe.
Parts of Atlanta were like battlefields,
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people fist fighting about race, others
hobbling along asking for spare change.
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To walk through those streets, I needed
combat boots, to run, to kick, to escape,
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but, as part of the natural world,
I don’t camouflage well into city.
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I could make a list of all the ways
people get by
and all the things to change.
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The bullfrog doesn’t live well on asphalted land.
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We are meant to be in connection with each other,
where no one is spare.
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ii.
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I imagine the land before we came.
Acres of thicket, trees and bramble.
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Humans measure all of this by acreage,
kilometers, miles, rather than
the jump reach of a bullfrog,
rather than the size of its tympanum
and whether it is larger than the eye.
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Wheelchair in Sand
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Even in this cool air,
a woman in a magenta
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bathing suit, unable
to stand alone, is held,
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at the edge of ocean,
by a man her height.
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Water billows and turns.
He stands her up as if
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he plans to stand her up
over and over again.
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Ocean pulls her into tide,
swallows her with mouth
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of whale. Her legs dangle
like bait, she is steady
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in his arms and I think
he must be a man with
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the heart of a whale. A young
woman yells Hold on Mama,
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runs for the chair, drags
its robot wheels through
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beach and saltwater until
it’s behind her and they push
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against swelling ocean
and sinking sand.
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Atlantic City’s Great Black-Backed Gulls
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Each one like an animal
++++ you could spoon or cradle if they wouldn’t fly away.
They stand facing the wind, lined up
++++ away from the ocean.
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Even people who’ve never seen the ocean, I think,
must know its waves, like a rhythm of Earth
that water must know even without knowing,
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just as grass knows sun,
like desert cactus know rain.
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It’s different just beyond the gulls.
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Shiny baubles and buildings,
casinos and their flashing lights,
siren sounds, bell-clanging promises,
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oohs, and ahhhs.
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Perfume brings back my grandmother.
A gasoline smell reminds me of riding
on a boat on a Georgia lake.
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I could never know a casino in my body
in the same way as I know
how thirst is quenched with water.
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If there were a hurricane here, like
the one headed toward Florida,
I would sense it in my muscles,
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my legs, my head, the heaviness
heaving my body into the menace.
I know that feeling, knew it once,
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don’t think it every completely left me.
Shape of storm pushes at all of nature—
and I feel it within me,
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like Earth feels it’s coming.
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I learn it at every threat of destruction.
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Liza Wolff-Francis
from 48 Hours Down the Shore, Kelsay Books, American Fork UT; © 2024
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Three writer friends escaping the grinding dailies for a few days together: on the one side ocean, mystery and seduction, infinite expanse of watery planet; on the other side greed and tinsel and different seductions, the exploited and the exploiting. Liza Wolff-Francis’s poems can be arms spreading wide cymbals of glass before they clash and shatter, or arms that lift again the creature in its brokenness and wish for healing. During 48 hours down the shore, as one says in New Jersey, Liza celebrates love and kindness and the dignity of surf and sea-creature. Never, though, does she overlook the struggle all around us, of person and of planet. She describes herself as ecopoet. I feel in these poems not only the ecology of our threatened and suffering earth, but also the social ecology, cultural ecology, human ecology so twisted and strained, so threatened and threatening that it is easy to become overwhelmed.
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What to do when overwhelmed? My reptilian hindbrain is more likely to retreat than lash out. Close your eyes, close your ears and ignore the impending destruction. Or do lash out – hurt someone before they can hurt you. Or look there – a man is introducing his crippled lover to the surf. Listen – gulls are laughing with you as much as at you, and the waves’ approach and retreat murmur . . . you belong here. Small acts will save our planet, a million small acts of love, a billion. A poem is just such a small act of invitation. You are invited to advance rather than retreat. To embrace rather than to strike. Each act of love declares we are not giving up.
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Liza Wolff-Francis is the 8th Poet Laureate of Carrboro, North Carolina, USA. She teaches creative writing workshops, has written plays and reviews, and whatever is happening around the world or down the street, she never looks away. 48 Hours Down the Shore is available from Kelsay Books. More about Liza at http://www.lizawolff.com.
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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;
. . . . . every Saturday 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:
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Thanks again for joining the conversation.
 . 
– Bill
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Doughton Park Tree 2021-10-23
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Saturday morning readers share:
Ben Stinson
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Cosmic Okra
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With a low,
warbling harmonica
and a banjo pluck intro
We fade into Jim,
he’s got a beard
like a startled badger,
and I,
well,
I’m wearing mismatched socks, again.
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We’re staring up,
at a sky so black,
like a cosmic inkwell spilled.
Jim says, “You know, the nearest star,
it’s, like, a zillion miles away,
give or take a Tuesday.”
I say, “Yeah,”
and remind him,
“that’s just
the neighbor’s
backyard bug zapper.”
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Sitting on his porch swing,
the rusty springs creaking like a chorus of old robots.
We’re eating pickled okra,
(because,
well,
why not?),
While pondering the sheer,
unadulterated,
mind-bending,
eyeball-melting,
banana-hammock-wearing,
vastness of it all.
Galaxies spiraling,
black holes slurping,
quasars burping out light
like a drunken dragon.
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And here we are,
Jim and I,
two blips,
two specks,
two slightly damp,
okra-flavored consciousnesses,
witnessing the cosmic freak show.
Like two white squirrels
at a symphony,
trying to figure out
if the conductor’s hat
is edible.
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We’re here,
we’re aware,
we’re mildly confused.
And Jim just asked if the moon is made of cheddar.
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The universe,
it doesn’t care about our socks,
or our pickled okra,
or our existential dread.
It just keeps spinning,
expanding,
doing its thing,
like a giant,
cosmic washing machine,
set on “infinite rinse cycle.”
And we’re here,
watching the suds,
wondering
if we left the dryer running.
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And Jim just burped,
saying profoundly,
“That’s probably a supernova.”
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I am a sculptor and poet living in the mountains of NC.  I find inspiration from all the bounty that nature provides. — Ben
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 . 
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;
. . . . . every Saturday 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
 . 
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[ 4 poems with a scientific bent ]
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Epistemology
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I
Kick at the rock, Sam Johnson, break your bones:
But cloudy, cloudy is the stuff of stones.
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II
We milk the cow of the world, and as we do
We whisper in her ear, “You are not true.”
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Richard Wilbur (1921-2017)
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Seeing Things
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Close as I ever came to seeing things
The way the physicists say things really are
Was out on Sudbury Marsh one summer eve
When a silhouetted tree against the sun
Seemed at my sudden glance to be afire:
A black and boiling smoke made all its shape.
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Binoculars resolved the enciphered sight
To make it clear the smoke was a cloud of gnats,
Their millions doing such a steady dance
As by the motion of the many made the one
Shape constant and kept it so in both the forms
I’d thought to see, the fire and the tree.
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Strike through the mask? you find another mask,
Mirroring mirrors by analogy
Make visible. I watched till the greater smoke
Of night engulfed the other, standing out
On the marsh amid a hundred hidden streams
Meandering down from Concord to the sea.
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Howard Nemerov (1920-1991)
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from the installation EXQUISITE CREATURES: CHRISTOPHER MARLEY
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Little Cosmic Dust Poem
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Our of the debris of dying stars,
this rain of particles
that waters the waste with brightness;
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the sea-wave of atoms hurrying home,
collapse of the giant, unstable guest who cannot stay;
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the sun’s heart reddens and expands,
his mighty aspiration is lasting,
as the shell of his substance
one day will be white with frost.
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In the radiant field of Orion
great hordes of stars are forming,
just as we see every night,
fiery and faithful to the nd.
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Out of the cold and fleeing dust
that is never and always,
the silence and waste to come —
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this arm, this hand,
my voice, your face, this love.
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John Haines (1924-2011)
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Cosmic Gall
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Neutrinos, they are very small.
+++ They have no charge and have no mass
And do not interact at all.
The earth is just a silly ball
+++ To them, though which they simply pass
Like dustmaids down a drafty hall
+++ Or photons through a sheet of glass.
+++ They snub the most exquisite gas,
Ignore the most substantial wall,
+++ Cold-shoulder steel and sounding brass,
Insult the stallion in his stall,
+++ And, scorning barriers of class,
Infiltrate you and me! Like tall
and painless guillotines, they fall
+++ Down through our heads into the grass.
At night, they enter at Nepal
+++ And pierce the lover and his lass
from underneath the bed — you call
+++ It wonderful; I call it crass.
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John Updike (1932-2009)
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These poems are from The World Treasury of Physics, Astronomy, and Mathematics, this year’s Christmas present to me from Linda. Essays by Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg, and Stephen Hawking jostle up against chapters by Annie Dillard, Isaac Asimov, and Lewis Thomas. And then comes the section of poetry! Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, and Gerard Manley Hopkins open to be followed by these four 20th century poets, and there is even a poem by James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879), titan of electromagnetism and whose equations remain the bedrock of classical physics. Who knew? The following paragraphs are from the section introduction, The Poetry of Science:
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+++ The scepticism that many poets display toward science reflects, and to some extent perpetuates, the myth that science is cold and inhuman, poetry warm and romantic. Yet science is more romantic than is generally realized, poetry less so, and the scientists and the poets ultimately are allies. Both are creative and unpredictable (and therefore dangerous). Neither can tolerate authoritarianism, blind obedience, or cant. And both, to do their best work, must draw on aesthetic as well as intellectual resources; a logical but ugly mathematical theorem is as unsatisfactory as a pretty but silly sonnet.
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+++ This is not to say that scientists should try to emulate poets, or that poets should turn proselytes for science. Poetry and science are both too powerful to benefit from so bland and bourgeois a marriage, and their relationship is likely to remain stormy so along as each remains vital. But they need each other, and the world needs them both.
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The World Treasury of Physics, Astronomy, and Mathematics, edited by Timothy Ferris. Little, Brown and Company, Boston Toronto London. © 1991 by Timothy Ferris.
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from the installation EXQUISITE CREATURES: CHRISTOPHER MARLEY
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 . 
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;
. . . . . every Saturday 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
 . 
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