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Posts Tagged ‘Christina Baumis’

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[ poems by Dana Levin, Christina Baumis, Janice F. Booth,
Natalie Canavor, David Winship, Sherry Siddall ]
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Watching the Sea Go
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               Thirty seconds of yellow lichen.
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Thirty seconds of coil and surge,
               fern and froth, thirty seconds
                                of salt, rock, fog, spray.
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                                                                           Clouds
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moving slowly to the left—
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               A door in a rock through which you could see
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                                            __
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another rock,
                                laved by the weedy tide.
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               Like filming breathing—thirty seconds
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of tidal drag, fingering
               the smaller stones
                                down the black beach—what color
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               was that, aquamarine?
Starfish spread
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                                their salmon-colored hands.
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                                            __
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               I stood and I shot them.
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I stood and I watched them
               right after I shot them: thirty seconds of smashed sea
                                while the real sea
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                                thrashed and heaved—
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               They were the most boring movies ever made.
I wanted
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                                to mount them together and press Play.
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                                            __
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               Thirty seconds of waves colliding.
Kelp
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               with its open attitudes, seals
                                riding the swells, curved in a row
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                                just under the water—
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                                                 the sea,
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               over and over.
                                                 Before it’s over.
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Dana Levin
from Banana Palace. Copyright © 2016 by Dana Levin and Copper Canyon Press, http://www.coppercanyonpress.org. At The Poetry Foundation.
selected by Tina Baumis
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Ms. Levin’s poem evokes sadness each time I read it. Her image of the vast empty ocean is aimed to convey loss with minimal words. The title is perfect as she ebbs and flows leading our thoughts along with hers. Ms. Levin’s poem brings the encroaching shadow while I reflected on nature’s generous glow.
  — Tina
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IMG_3599
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❀ ✿ ✾ ❁ ❀
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Lake Freeman
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Curled against the nestling seat curve,
strands of hair blowing like dandelion seeds.
Dipping fingers in clear lake water
impermanent patterns sparkle,
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break and dance in the sun’s bountiful balm.
Crisp water loosens pent up tension
eases into soothing meandering thoughts
as those densities are flung turbulently behind
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in the boat’s churning frothy wake.
I am young, once again.
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Tina Baumis
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❀ ✿ ✾ ❁ ❀
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Blue Spaces Elegy     *
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Anchored by a wide, lazy creek, the street I live on
climbs to a four-square farmhouse on the bluff
with its dilapidated carriage stable standing sentry;
the old barn collapsed years ago.
The land along our street— clay now,
once pristine blue space.
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Long ago, the farmer grew corn and tobacco on this land.
A lane, rutted and raw descended from barn
 to creek through blue space.
The plow, farmhands, and wagons piled with the harvests
moved down to the creek and up the lane,
and the farmer’s family prospered.
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Skiffs plied the creek and brought their catch
to the farmer’s dock at the end of the lane.
The creek’s rich stock of Bay crabs and fish
surpassed the land’s bounty.
And the lane morphed into a gravel road
where rusty pickups ladened with
bushels of crabs and shellfish came and went.
And the farmer’s family prospered.
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When the depleted land failed,
the farmer sold it as lots to watermen
and small clapboard cottages popped up beside the creek.
But the watermen’s catch dwindled;
and town folks bought the plots, tore down the cottages
and built sturdy ranchers and split-levels with driveways.
Curbs were added, and the gravel road was paved,
burying three small tributaries beneath the street,
cutting off the spring water that fed the old creek.
When the rains came, soil and lawn fertilizer
washed down the paved street, over the
buried springs, into the tired creek,
but the farmer’s family prospered.
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The old farmhouse watched;
the carriage stable and barn emptied.
The farmer and the farmer’s wife died.
The neighborhood grew.
Builders came and went.
People prospered,
homes expanded.
The creek bed clogged with silt and runoff.
The farm was gone, the watermen were gone
from the now brown and turgid creek,
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and the farmer’s family lives
somewhere else.
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Janice F. Booth
*    Blue spaces are environments with prominent water features known to improve our well-being, similar to “green spaces.”
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Thank you, Bill, for this opportunity to let my work speak, in my own small way, of the earth’s suffering. Having lived on my creek-side street for over 40 years, I have watched changes both micro and macro in the tiny part of the planet I inhabit.  I was moved to write this poem as our creek turned brown and thick with algae from the winter run-off and spring rains. 
— Janice
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City Trees
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Back then it was safe for a 5-year old
to elevator down to the street and jump rope
or play potsy with other kids on the block,
hopping between chalked boxes on the sidewalk.
No mothers hovering to watch.
A safe world if not a pretty one,
hundreds of such blocks with
precisely aligned 6-story buildings:
a bleak ocean of brick in shades of muddy brown.
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But East 177th Street harbored something alien.
Lining the street for exactly one block,
Grand Concourse to Morris Avenue,
a row of  majestic, giant trees endured.
Huge dark trunks rising way past the flat rooftops,
branches arcing over the six stories.
Like no other street I’d seen.
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I never knew why they grew in such unwelcoming habitat.
Nor what kind of trees they were,
the shape of their leaves, their color in autumn.
In truth my young self hardly noticed the trees.
Yet these icons of nature hovered over my childhood.
Made my drab street unique and colorful,
gave me something to look up to-literally.
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Hinted at vistas way beyond my limited view.
I did not understand those trees, but loved them.
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Natalie Canavor
from The Song in the Room
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Growing up in a New York City neighborhood gave me little early exposure to nature beyond trips to a few parks and an occasional picnic to the Westchester “countryside.” Animal life meant squirrels. Pigeons and sparrows were the birds we knew. And if anything green graced the immediate environment, I can’t recall it. Except for the trees. I had a chance to revisit the Bronx recently and found that my trees had vanished from the street. I feel sorry for the new crops of kids living on this not-so-special-anymore city block.
— Natalie
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Watershed Community
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We live in a Watershed Community.
Water here since the dawn of time
will be here after the sunset of time
same water, going round and round
circulating by our solar pump engine
a closed cycle circling our Earth
coursing through our hills
our bodies, our communities
connecting through our water
around us, in the air, in the ground
flowing in the streams, rising in the air
falling in the rain
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over and over.
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Water is our source, our soul
keeping us growing by its flowing
through our watershed
sustaining us, nourishing us, enlivening us.
We are baptized into life on Earth
through this ancient water
tumbling through these hills
dripping through our watershed
down the mountains to the sea
nurturing our fellow life forms
eroding surfaces, changing form
shaping our lives.
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Do for others downstream
as you would have
others upstream
do for you.
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David Winship
Bristol, Tennessee
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October Tide
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A nor’easter dabbles off the coast
raising the water to whiteness,
the wind to forgetting itself
in gusts and lurches.
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Back canals are sober enough
for cormorants to lounge
wings stretched in worship
as deep cicadas drone in the cedars.
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The tide escapes as it always does
twice a day, responding to the
slippery Moon, pulling the blood
in flood time, neaps and springs.
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Gravities align, Sun and Moon
dance out of habit,
the perfect mathematics
just enough to keep us here.
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Sherry Siddall
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October Tide appears in my first full length book, Transformed and Singing, recently published by Main Street Rag.  If you stop to think about the almost impossible coming together of life on our planet, you have to sit down and take a breath. This idea occupies a lot of my time as a poet, and in Transformed and Singing (hint: cicadas abound). 
— Sherry Siddall
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❀ ✿ ✾ ❁ ❀
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I am sure it is a great mistake always to know enough to go in when it rains. One may keep snug and dry by such knowledge, but one misses a world of loveliness.
— Adeline Knapp
A rainy day is the perfect time for a walk in the woods.
— Rachel Carson
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Thank you for celebrating the month of April with International Earth Day (April 22) and National Poetry Month. Readers have selected poems that connect us to our planet and each other. If you have a poem that has rooted you to the earth and spread your branches into bright sky, please share! It can be a poem by your favorite writer, living or dead, a poem of your own, or both. We will continue sharing Earth poems as long as you send them.
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Send a your poem(s) in the body of the email or as .DOC or .RTF to:
ecopoetry@griffinpoetry.com 
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Please include your comments or reaction to the poem. And publication acknowledgments if previously published.
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Feel free to invite others to send their favorite Earth Day poems. Please refer them to this link for instructions: EARTH DAY EVERY DAY. Perhaps some day we will be able to say we live in the Age of Connection.
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Thank you for visiting Verse and Image: 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.
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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
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COMMENTS@GRIFFINPOETRY.COM
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Thanks again for joining the conversation.
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— Bill
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❀ ✿ ✾ ❁ ❀
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2017-02-11 Doughton Park Tree
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April 21, 2024
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For, lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone;
The flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land;
The fig tree putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grape give a good smell.
Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away.
++++++ Song of Solomon 2:11-13
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I Open the Window
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What I wanted
wasn’t to let in the wetness.
That can be mopped.
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Nor the cold.
There are blankets.
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What I wanted was
the siren, the thunder, the neighbor,
the fireworks, the dog’s bark.
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Which of them didn’t matter?
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Yes, this world is perfect,
all things as they are.
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But I wanted
not to be
the one sleeping soundly, on a soft pillow,
clean sheets untroubled,
dreaming there still might be time,
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while this everywhere crying
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Jane Hirshfield
from The Asking, Penguin/Random House, © 2023
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Shared by Debra Kaufman, Mebane, NC, who writes:
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I love the subtlety in every poem by Jane Hirsfield. In her new, profound collection, The Asking, every poem is a kind of inquiry that allows readers to join her in generously observing the world and all its beings. She is never assuming, she investigates even the smallest of gestures or creatures, to stay open each day to possibilities, while still acknowledging the darkness.
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++++++ Debra
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. . . the road is found in the persistent walking of it . . .
++++++ Jane Hirshfield
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May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view.  May your mountains rise into and above the clouds.
++++++ Edward Abbey
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Fall Changes
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I left those three crows
the last corn in my garden,
and not one thanked me.
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++++++ *
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Bright August sunlight
but just north of the woodpile
a November wind.
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++++++ *
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September begins
with a vee of geese flying
and two fat, slow frogs.
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++++++ *
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All night fallen leaves
pile up under the maples—
old thoughts, cast away.
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++++++ *
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A ragged black glove
high in the oak’s bare branches
flies away, cawing.
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++++++ *
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Through the leafless hedge
a neighbor I’ve never met
waves from her window.
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Patricia Hooper
from Wild Persistence, University of Tampa Press, © 2019
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Shared by David Radavich, Charlotte NC, who writes:
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I greatly admire, Patricia Hooper; Fall Changes is from her book Wild Persistence.  I love the quiet interactions in this poem between the human and the non-human natural worlds – so comfortable and easy, so assumed.  The haiku portraits are subtly varied yet intimately linked, and the mere contemplation of trees and birds and frogs leads the witnesses to greet each other in friendly neighborliness even though they are strangers.  This is a gentle masterpiece of evocative scene-painting.
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 The other poem is called New Emigrants from my book  The Countries We Live In (Main Street Rag, 2012).  This is a more incisive critique of climate change and human greed.
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++++++ David
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New Emigrants
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These maples have lived
here all their lives,
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turned colors by the season,
offered shade, been
neighborly
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on the edge of the city.
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Who would have thought,
after all this time,
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air could become
the enemy?
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Earth has allied itself
with terrorists
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who decry
the wickedness of weeds.
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Water streams in
under cover of drought,
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fire climbs
out with its fierce
fingers.
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Now some are asking
whether it might be better
for the old limbs
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to give place
to homes and people
and their saving chemicals.
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Already I see wise ones
taking their leaves
north to where ice melts
into soft angels.
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David Radavich, Charlotte, NC
from The Countries We Live In, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC © 2012
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❦ ❦ ❦
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i thank You God for most this amazing
day:  for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes.
++++++ e.e.cummings
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Voices of the Air
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But then there comes that moment rare
When, for no cause that I can find,
The little voices of the air
Sound above all the sea and wind.
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The sea and wind do then obey
And sighing, sighing double notes
Of double basses, content to play
A droning chord for the little throats—
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The little throats that sing and rise
Up into the light with lovely ease
And a kind of magical, sweet surprise
To hear and know themselves for these—
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For these little voices: the bee, the fly,
The leaf that taps, the pod that breaks,
The breeze on the grass-tops bending by,
The shrill quick sound that the insect makes.
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Katherine Mansfield
from Poems, London: Constable, © 1923 and New York: Alfred A. Knopf, © 1924
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Shared by Tina Baumis, Goose Creek, SC, who writes:
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Ms. Mansfield enlarged the smallest of movements and voices in a Georgia O’Keefe style, drawing us into the captivating moments she observed when drowning out the sea and wind.  We too, can relate to the drone of the bigger sounds in our day to day lives and rediscover wonder, peace, and joy of nature when we allow ourselves time to immerse into nature’s voices. “The leaf that taps, the pod that breaks, The breeze on the grass-tops bending by,” are lines that speak to me.
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I took a walk in the woods
and came out taller than the trees.++++++ Henry David Thoreau
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This quotation elevates your spirits inspiring you to go outdoors to appreciate the magic we often overlook during our full days. Recharge. Serenity. 
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The California Urban Forest Council holds an annual haiku themed contest.  I was fortunate to have my haiku listed on their Facebook pages. On February 17th, 2024, my haiku was posted. An attempt to evoke feelings as Mr. Thoreau’s quote.
++++++ Tina
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positivity
gather under canopy
mood swings lift with breeze
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Christina (Tina) Baumis
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We cannot be truly ourselves in any adequate manner without all our companion beings throughout the earth.
++++++ Thomas Berry
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Finally, the southwestern US is home to several species of scolecophidian blindsnakes in the genera Rena and Leptotyphlops. These are tiny and have undifferentiated body scales, meaning that all scale rows around the entire body (including the underside) are the same width. They are iridescent and extremely difficult to count, which has given rise to one of my all-time favorite quotes from a scientific paper: “We castigate the ancient lineage that begat Liotyphlops, for it is obviously the worst designed snake from which to obtain systematic data” (Dixon & Kofron 1983). 
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To celebrate EARTH DAY 2024 we are featuring seven posts of poems submitted by readers – poems by William Blake to Walt Whitman, Robinson Jeffers to A.R.Ammons to Linda Pastan, and by a number of contemporary poets. Check in every day or two – connect to the earth and to each other!
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2018-02-09 Doughton Park Tree . 

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