Archive for January, 2025
Just Human
Posted in Imagery, poetry, tagged Bill Griffin, imagery, nature, nature photography, nature poetry, NC Poets, poetry, Press 53, Robert Morgan, Southern writing on January 31, 2025| 9 Comments »
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[with 4 poems by Robert Morgan]
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Time
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Snow-covered peaks gather in the north
like arabs talking.
You can’t be sure you see them
but they leave an afterimage, detached
from the horizon, floating on haze.
Rugged seconds around the sky’s dial.
If you look long enough they seem to march
like bishops shuffling toward hell.
I know the ground is a bridge
leading there –
to the white tents
and altitudes of death –
but I don’t believe it. I don’t
believe you can get there by just walking
the earth one step after another,
but must be snatched miraculously away,
fall upward into the terrible
blue emptiness.
When I stand in a field,
the field and I are a sundial.
But the body alone is a clock, and each
motion it makes.
Something must distract us, anything.
The cornfield slapping in the rhythm of a tennis game,
a crow flying his clockhands on a face
without surface.
The will always hungry.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Red Owl, W.W.Norton & Company; © 1972
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Two squirrels in my beech tree just can’t get along. I’ve named them Buddy and Holly. Buddy attacks my squirrel-proof feeder like he’s going to buzzsaw right through the metal bars. Meanwhile Holly is perched on a high branch eating beechnuts like popcorn and raining the pointy tetrahedrons on my deck, little caltrops.
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Until I arrive to refill the feeder. Then Buddy has to scoot; he takes a flying leap into the silverbell. Holly continues to observe. I always spill some seeds – careless me – and when I re-hang the feeder Buddy scrabbles back to snarf a few then spring back up to the squirrel-proof, legs spread and clawed toes splayed like a cheetah bringing down a gazelle. At this point Holly climbs down to check out Buddy’s leavings. When he spies her, things get tense.
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“Hey! Those are my seeds. Those are all my seeds!”
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Holly sits up on her little haunches and rolls her eyes. “I didn’t see you planting any sunflowers last summer, Bottlebrush. You just play with your feeder toy while I have a nice lunch.”
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“But I want those seeds. You might eat something I’m going to need later. Quit being so mean! Don’t you know this is where bad feelings come from?”
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“Listen, Furbrain, this is where bad feelings come from.” She pokes his fuzzy chest with a foreclaw. “If you’re having bad feelings, I didn’t give them to you. You gave them to yourself.”
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“Selfish, selfish, selfish.”
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“Can I help it if it’s in my squirrel-nature to be hungry? And isn’t it squirrel-nature when you’re hungry to eat? Why don’t you pull up a chair (speaking entirely figuratively, of course) and enjoy a little lunch yourself.”
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“Hmph, sez you,” Buddy grumbles. He picks up a seed and nibbles. Palpable silence I think you could call it.
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“Hey,” Buddy finally offers after a few minutes, “When we finish these seeds, how about you hop up on that feeder with me. Maybe together we can shake out a few seeds. And . . . you could have some, too, if you want.”
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Years ago Linda and I watched an episode of X-Files that has become our byword. Scully and Mulder were at a rest home investigating paranormal events involving gruesome mutilation, the usual stuff. One of the rest home residents was assisting them with their inquiries. Should he also be a suspect? The old man was wincingly meek, not very bright, and whenever he messed up or something went wrong he would hang his head and apologize, “I’m just a human being.”
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I am just a human being. And how often am I compelled to admit that I inhabit a planet full of people that are also just human beings? How did Linda and I end up with so many family members who seem incapable of living up to our expectations? Oh well, they are just human beings. And so are the people we attend church with, and sing with, and meet at the store, and whose yard signs and bumper sticks are so aggressively in our faces. “What a world,” said the Wicked Witch of the West when she was doused. So many of these human beings have the power to give me endless heartburn; I could use some of that cold water.
Or I could quit giving them so much power. I’m lucky that I have Holly to remind me – when there are flickers of bad feelings, maybe some human being has struck the spark but I provide the fuel. Let’s just cool down for a minute. Aren’t we in this thing together? I’ll try to cut you the same slack I’d want you to cut me. After all, the two of us are just human beings.
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Land Diving
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Though it’s no disgrace refusing
some things must be done.
And present accomplishment
is no guarantee
of future.
You must come close
as possible without touching
to prove brinksmanship, fly
from the sapling girdered tower
before the whole village, leaping with a scream
against the wall of fear, step onto
the white-hot floor
of emptiness
holding only to yourself.
You will know the pure isolation of fall.
The vines bound to your feet must not snag
on the scaffolding
or they will swing you crushing
into the frame and braces.
They must not break
or be an inch too long
or you will be smothered by
the swat of earth.
Yet the meaning is the closeness.
No stretching out your arms;
you must be jerked to a stop face against
the trampled dirt
by the carefully measured
bonds.
Only they can save you.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Land Diving, Louisiana State University Press; © 1976
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In a journal he kept in the 1970’s, The Transfigured Body, Robert Morgan wrote this: “It is objectivity and precision that can be translated and that translates, the love of the humble detail, a sensitivity to the eros of all things, focused recognition; . . . I write to establish the reality of things. It’s as if I’m afraid they aren’t there unless substantiated by language, and consubstantiated.” [from the introduction by Robert M. West to Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan]
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Consubstantiation is a new word for me. I recognize transubstantiation, which means transmutation, to utterly change the character or substance of a thing. But consubstantiation is more personal, more intimate – to exist together in one and the same time and space. To unite and blend and merge. To become one. I yearn to be attuned to the smallest detail. I long to feel it, that shared presence with other humble creatures in the midst of creation, that eros of all things.
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I prepare myself for that love by learning: botany, taxonomy, ecology. But I experience eros by kneeling and feeling the waxy winter leaf of a cranefly orchid; by turning its shadow green face to reveal the rich burgundy of its obverse; by remembering July blossoms when I see the dry seed stalk in January; by imagining the scant slant sunlight kissing that tough leaf to grant life for another summer’s blooms.
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And I experience the eros of all things through a poet’s careful observation, through the power of language to create juxtaposition and connection. Robert Morgan’s poems are often set in the North Carolina mountains, but his poetry is about everything. Perhaps we, who are just human beings after all, cannot overcome our hominid urges to circle around our small fires and fear and demonize all outsiders. Perhaps we can’t regain our ancestors’ connections to the earth, its plants and its animals, its textures and its smells. Sometimes I imagine we are determined to extinguish every spark that makes us human. But then I spend a quiet hour with poems to are determined to rekindle those sparks.
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The Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, available HERE from Press 53reprints in their entirety his first four published volumes: Zirconia Poems (1969); Red Owl (1972); Land Diving (1976); Trunk & Thicket (1978).
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Read additional selections from this new book at last week’s VERSE & IMAGE.
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Whippoorwill
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The dead call at sundown from their places
on the mountain and down by the old mill.
They rise from the cellars of trees
and move up and down the valley
all night grazing like deer.
The call:
a rusty windmill creaks on the prairie.
Bats dipping and rising on ski jumps
are antennae
receiving and transmitting the code.
The whippoorwill interprets the news
from the dead, the unborn.
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2 A.M.
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A dog barks through the horn of a valley.
Low moon burning in a cedar.
The creek mutters like an old woman
who walks in her sleep among the trees
dreaming of the life after death
when she will lie down like the stream
and flow to the darkness.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Red Owl, W.W.Norton & Company; © 1972
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Bookshelves
Posted in Photography, poetry, tagged Bill Griffin, imagery, nature photography, nature poetry, NC Poets, poetry, Press 53, Robert Morgan, Southern writing on January 24, 2025| 5 Comments »
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[with 4 poems by Robert Morgan]
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Foxfire
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Bright lace on the darkness grows
heavy as the meat of lightning bugs
crushed on bark, rotting leaves.
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Flakes of the moon stuck to spongy logs.
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Seconds sprinkled from a luminous dial on bearskin.
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Glow worms crawl all night in stump water
without moving. St. Elmo’s fire.
Foxfire swims like fish of the deepest troughs.
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City lights seen from a bomber.
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the eyes of dead wood stare like jack-o-lanterns
burning last year’s sun
after a wet spell.
*
Coals of unlife,
chilly owls.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Zirconia Poems, Lillabulero Press; © 1969
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When I was a Junior in High School I was going steady with the daughter of our town’s elementary school librarian. If you think Linda’s house wasn’t filled to the rafters with books, you’ve got another think coming. When we were in college, still dating, I decided for Christmas I would build her bookshelves.
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During Junior High all the seventh grade boys took Home Ec with the girls and all the girls took Wood Shop with the boys. I got an A in sock darning and jello salad; on my woodworking project, a sculpture of a fish in walnut, I got a B+. Seven years later I gathered pine planks and 1×2’s in our basement to devise the Christmas present. Measure twice, cut once? Not so much as I recall, although I do remember wood glue, finishing nails, Minwax stain and varnish. Steel wool between coats. Linda seemed to like her present. Enough to marry me a year later and move the shelves to our 3rd floor apartment on Duke Street in Durham.
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That little book case was not fine cabinetry, but the shelves didn’t sag beneath Linda’s textbooks: history, art, religion, all the heaviest stuff. My design was basic, mostly a ladder, something we and the years might climb together, or maybe an altar where she could cherish and display her first and truest loves. It was good as I could make it, the only thing I knew to build.
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What did I know of all we and the years would build? The propagating books we’d carry home to become our family? Children grow and leave and carry their children back to you for an afternoon, but books are always close at hand to read to grandchildren like we read them to the grandchildren’s parents. A child is here for but a moment but bright spines and colored pages rest and wait for their return.
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My work was not to build a house, or a home, or even rooms, but simply room enough for something she would never finish loving. Every birthday, every holiday, another book; any old occasion is fit time to add to the welcome weight of pages. They fill the hours and our hearts – and I foresee there will never be quite enough shelves for all.
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Very Old Man
Hounds bay in his breath,
face a wilderness, eyes like frozen fountains.
He speaks from a foreign country, words drunk
with exhaustion, wornout
habits of the tongue.
His shoulders are small as a child’s.
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Sits on the cold peak watching us climb,
or doesn’t bother.
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Elegy
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Guess I’ll light a rag out of here, he said
and blindness rose in his open eyes.
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Tilted chessmen, tombstones graze on the hill,
drag shadows at the setting moon.
Eighty years go down
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like a ship.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Zirconia Poems, Lillabulero Press; © 1969
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Saturday, September 15, 2001: Robert Morgan has managed to travel to Southern Pines to read at Weymouth Center before the North Carolina Poetry Society. So healing, so encouraging to us fellow mortals; I remember his tone and demeanor more than I remember his words, but many of his words have never left me. Actually, his words have grown in me and flourished. Audubon’s Flute – I have to pull that one out and read it every Earth Day.
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Audubon in the summer woods
by the afternoon river sips
his flute, his fingers swimming on
the silver as silver notes pour
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by the afternoon river, sips
and fills the mosquito-note air
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So many notes before and after that morning in Weymouth Woods, so many words. No wonder that when I learn that Press 53 has collected Robert Morgan’s first four books of poetry into a single volume, I hear the silver tones calling me. In the lyrical introduction to Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Robert M. West shares this quotation: Asked, ‘What is the highest praise that could be given to a poet’s work, southern or otherwise?’ Morgan responded, “ ‘You must read this.’ The greatest honor is to be read.”
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And so we shall read and honor Robert Morgan. I am picking up his book every day for the next several weeks, and we will see where the music leads us.
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Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, with an introduction by Robert M. West (co-editor of Robert Morgan: Essays on the Life and Work), is a Carolina Classics Edition from Press 53, available HERE.
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Distances
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Mind wanders down the long slope of trees
like small cat fur
turning blue in the midday sunlight of December
into a short valley
with only a cabin and a juniper
and one horse nibbling the dried grass
around an Indian grave.
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Clear through the distance of memory
into the cabin where my great grandmother, a bride
sits by the fire smoking her clay pipe
and watching through the door the gap in the mountains
where her man may come any moment
with gun on shoulder and quail swinging
and steps so rhythmic
they leave tracks in the mind.
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Robert Morgan
from Collected Early Poems of Robert Morgan, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; Carolina Classics Editions; © 2024
originally published in Zirconia Poems, Lillabulero Press; © 1969
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POETRY SUBMISSIONS CALENDAR 2025
Posted in poetry, tagged poetry, poetry journal submission, Poetry Journals, poetry submissions, Submissions Calendar on January 20, 2025| 8 Comments »
Update January 20, 2025
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Why on earth would you want to send your poems to some mysterious editor who after four months or six months or probably much longer will arrange for an anonymous message to pop up in your inbox along the lines of, “We regret to inform you . . . ?” Why, oh why?
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Let’s be honest: we poets are not really masochists who thrive on rejection. We just want to connect with someone, which is why we write poems in the first place. And the someone we would most joyously wish to connect with is a reader! So if someone other than your best friend from high school is ever going to read your poetry, first you have to run the gauntlet of editors.
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Another confession: I like editors. Most of them are also writing poetry and trying to get published – we are all in this together. Most editors are engaged and enthusiastic and really optimistic that the next poem they read is going to knock their socks off. And every once in a while one of them will communicate that enthusiasm to you, if you keep sending them your best writing.
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Editors are your friends. Treat them as such. Read their guidelines. Even better, read their publications. Send them poems they are apt to like, in the format they like, on the schedule they like. That’s where this POETRY SUBMISSIONS CALENDAR comes in.
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⇓⇓⇓ CLICK HERE ⇓⇓⇓
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Poetry Submissions Calendar – PDF file
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Here’s how I use the CALENDAR:
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It’s arranged by month – look down the column to see what journals and sources are open for submissions right now!
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Each row includes the web address – be sure to check before you submit, because requirements and schedules are always changing!
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The row also includes other information such as:
Is this an online publication only?
Should your submission include all poems in a single document?
What file formats do they accept?
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There are more instructions on the table itself. Feel free to print it out. The table currently (20 Jan 2025) contains 332 listings, including journals on hold or defunct (to save you from wild goose chases). At the end are some random references I’ve collected, a table of winners and losers on promptness of reply, and a few journals accepting art & photography. I would really appreciate it if you notify me of any errors or suggested changes!
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If you have journals you’d like me to add to the table please do send me the particulars! I will try to post an updated table once or twice a year and whenever I have made significant additions and corrections to the table.
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Finally, here’s a happy little story. I had received a standard rejection notice after a standard waiting period, but something about the personal nature of the rejection message prompted me to send a follow up email. I dared to ask if any of my poems came near the mark, and this was the editor’s reply:
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You certainly meet the mark, Bill. That is, you’re a fine writer. As are most of Innisfree‘s submitters. Who knows what causes a poem to leap out and insist on its acceptance to the reader. That happens about 2 percent of the time. I look forward to seeing more of your work in the future. [Greg McBride, editor, Innisfree Poetry Journal, December 2023]
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May your own poems leap out and insist upon their acceptance to the friendly neighborhood editor who is reading them. And even if they don’t, well, that was at least one reader!
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If you find this useful, if you can suggest more journals to include, or if you discover errors please send me a comment, correction or suggestions at:
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comments@griffinpoetry.com
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BILL GRIFFIN / ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA / USA
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Oh, and here’s the origin story: In 2015 I posted the prototype of this table as I was developing a tool to keep track of when and where to submit poems for publication. As the second of a two-part muse on why oh why we place ourselves at the mercy of all powerful editors, here’s the original post with description, but make sure you’re using the link at the top of this page for the most up-to-date version:
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