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Posts Tagged ‘Ecopoetry’

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Like a great poet, Nature knows how to produce the greatest effects with the most limited means.  –  Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)
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[poems by Wendell Berry, Gerard Manley Hopkins,
Chapman Hood Frazier, Maria Rouphail, Charles Carr –
shared by Les Brown, Joyce Brown, Joan Barasovska, Bill Griffin]
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What We Need is Here
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Geese appear high over us,
pass, and the sky closes. Abandon,
as in love or sleep, holds
them to their way, clear
in the ancient faith: what we need
is here. And we pray, not
for new earth or heaven, but to be
quiet in heart, and in eye,
clear. What we need is here.
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Wendell Berry
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When I read What We Need is Here, Mary Oliver’s Wild Geese came to mind. And this poem gives us permission to accept what is here because it is ingrained in our very being as is the flight of geese overhead. Nature can provide all we need. Not explicit, but implicit, in the poem, nature can only provide all we need if we respect and protect it.  –  Les Brown
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God’s Grandeur
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The world is charged with the grandeur of God.
    It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;
    It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil
Crushed. Why do men then now not reck his rod?
Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;
    And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;
    And wears man’s smudge and shares man’s smell: the soil
Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.
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And for all this, nature is never spent;
    There lives the dearest freshness deep down things;
And though the last lights off the black West went
    Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs —
Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
    World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.
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Gerard Manley Hopkins
Gerard Manley Hopkins: Poems and Prose (Penguin Classics, 1985)
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Selected and shared by Joyce Brown
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Surviving the Six Worlds
     for David Sanipass
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In the sixth world of the Mi’k maq
you walk as if in water
fluid, changing and final.
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Each world a hybrid you move through,
a blink, bend and flutter
where the roots are
and in each power, a sigh or shadow
at the edges of things
that live beyond you
in their hush and whisper.
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Water becomes land
and land, air.
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The golden frog in the dead pool,
the black bear
and, in your long dream, a word
becomes a crow’s call you wake from
that erodes into this life and back again.
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Learn where to walk and where not to,
listen to the wind as if it too might
become you. Discover in your feet
where each path leads. Look,
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a redwing blackbird
settles on the birch branch
and, in its croak, you glide
in a slow melt and shine,
a transparency
as solid as stone
but in a flash, gone.
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Smell the lilac in the wind
and feel how your foot will ache
before finding its step, this your ?
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signature into a white world
where you decay
green and back again.
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Chapman Hood Frasier
from The Lost Books of the Bestiary, V Press LC, February 2023.
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I hope you love birds, too.  It is economical.  It saves going to Heaven.  –  Emily Dickinson
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Keep a green tree in your heart and perhaps a song bird will come. –  Chinese proverb
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I Buried a Little Bird Today
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in the backyard
behind the old beech.
What sort of bird I cannot say,
or its age or where in its body
it suffered the fatal flaw.
I only held in one hand
its beating wings, the closed claw
and gaping beak,
its shuddering feathered head.
And when it stopped, I dug a hole
and to the beech I said,
Be kind, be kind.
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Maria Rouphail
from This small house, this big sky (Redhawk Publications, 2025)
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My connection to this poem is as the bird itself. At its dying moments it lies loved and protected in kind hands, as I hope to be. We cannot know, as the speaker cannot know about the bird, what our “fatal flaw” will be. Trust in my loved ones and in a loving God connect me to the little bird buried with compassion under the beech. – Joan Barasovska
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I was a girl, shy and secretive
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If I just ran fast enough – I was the fastest one –
I knew I could take off, fly, I mean, not sprout wings
or turn into a bird or angel but, as in a recurring dream,
leave the broken sidewalk below, float above the kids
I played with, higher, above the giant sycamore. Higher.
God was sorry I felt so bad.
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Joan Barasovska
from The Power of the Feminine I: Poems from the Feminine Perspective; ThreshPress Midwest (volume 002, 2024)
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IMG_0328
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Appalachian Come Inside
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Morning ends
like a last bite
of apple,
fifty degrees
but who’s counting,
January and coffee
strong enough to hold
my own turns sixty-one,
I would click my heels
if not for their knees.
A tall hickory pitches
a bird at the sky,
noon is a high fly ball,
The New River is quiet
applause,
the air so clean it splashes
the city from my face
and I want to say thank you
but the sun is already
an arm of you’re welcome
around my shoulder.
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Charles Carr
from Autumn Sky Poetry, January 29, 2018.
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Today when I walk outdoors I hope I remember to invite that arm around my shoulder. I confess I need it.  – Bill Griffin
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If we can believe that we are loved just as we are and that everything else is equally loved, we unveil a cosmic reality that is life-giving and a Christ-like reality that affirms the goodness of all creation. — Barbara Holmes
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Doughton Park Tree 2020-11-03b
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Poems for the Earth: Kenneth Rexroth, Denise Levertov, Robert Frost
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Lute Music
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The earth will be going on a long time
Before it finally freezes;
Men will be on it; they will take names,
Give their deeds reasons.
We will be here only
As chemical constituents –
A small franchise indeed.
Right now we have lives,
Corpuscles, ambitions, caresses,
Like everybody had once –
All the bright neige d’antan people,
“Blithe Helen, white Iope, and the rest,”
All the uneasy remembered dead.
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Here at the year’s end, at the feast
Of birth, let us bring to each other
The gifts brought once west through deserts –
The precious metal of our mingled hair,
The frankincense of enraptured arms and legs,
The myrrh of desperate invincible kisses –
Let us celebrate the daily
Recurrent nativity of love,
The endless epiphany of our fluent selves,
While the earth rolls away under us
Into unknown snows and summers,
Into untraveled spaces of the stars.
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Kenneth Rexroth
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Is it really so strange that the close observation of life, noticing its many particulars and how desperate it is to spread and mingle and weave itself among the web of all other lives no matter how disparate and also individually desperate, strange that the observation and celebration of this planet solely and most fortuitously devoted to conjuring life should also ferment within the observer a noticing and rumination about death? Beside the stream the liverworts unclasp their primitive green. Rockspray nourishes them for a moment then continues its endless work of washing the ashes of earth to the sea. Between right now and when my own ashes will join them is less than a blink for the water, the rock, the bryophytes. Two or three blinks would be more than enough to embrace the span of my entire species on this middle-aged planet. A small franchise indeed.
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In our current society the virtues have lost most of their value to inflation (inflation of ego primarily), and of all virtues humility seems valued least. Another winter is apparently ended but it is hard to shake the chill of despite that has settled and will not permit dispelling. For the few years left of my personal franchise among the living, where is the warmth? Right here, though, is my favorite seat on the back porch. Its cushion retains the signature of my backside. Ten feet away my favorite among all trees remains undiscouraged, staid Beech perhaps a quarter century my elder. Its scars and knots only enhance its beauty. At its crown the long slender leafbuds already unfurl to prepare the deep shade so welcome come May. And that smooth, grey skin – the filamentous liverworts readily accept its unselfish invitation to reside. As a representative of a large-brained apex species, could I humble myself before such an insignificant creature as a liverwort? Could I be half so generous as the Beech? Perhaps it is warm enough after all – life is poised to spread and mingle. Let’s go out front into the sun and plant some seeds.
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The Past III
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You try to keep the present
 ==== uppermost in your mind, counting its blessings
 ====  ==== (which today are many) because
although you are not without hope for the world, crazy
 ==== as that seems to your gloomier friends and often
 ====  ==== to yourself, yet your own hopes
have shrunk, options are less abundant. Ages ago
 ==== you enjoyed thinking of names
 ====  ==== for a daughter; later you still entertained,
at least as hypothesis, the notion
 ==== of a not impossible love, requited passion;
 ====  ==== or resolved modestly to learn
some craft, various languages.
 ==== And all those sparks of future
 ====  ==== winked out behind you, forgettable. So –
the present. It’s blessings
 ==== many today:
 ====  ==== the fresh, ornate
blossoms of the simplest trees a sudden
 ==== irregular pattern everywhere, audacious white,
 ====  ==== flamingo pink in a haze of early warmth.
But perversely it’s not
 ==== what you crave. You want
 ====  ==== the past. Oh, not your own,
no reliving of anything – no, what you hanker after
 ==== is a compost,
 ====  ==== a forest floor, thick, saturate,
fathoms deep, palimpsestuous, its surface a mosaic
 ==== of infinitely fragile, lacy, tenacious
 ====  ==== skeleton leaves. When you put your ear
to that odorous ground you can catch the unmusical, undefeated
 ==== belling note, as of a wounded stag escaped triumphant,
 ====  ==== of lives long gone.
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Denise Levertov
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POETRY FOR EARTH DAY 2025
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Our ability to perceive quality in nature begins, as in art, with the pretty. 
It expands through successive stages of the beautiful to values 
as yet uncaptured by language.
Aldo Leopold
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Is it only serendipity that Earth Day and National Poetry Month are celebrated together each year in April? Our need for the Earth, our love for the Earth, are beyond language, yet poetry must continue to yearn to express that love.
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Do you have a favorite poem that enlarges the boundaries of community? That notices the often overlooked? That celebrates all life on earth as one family together? We invite you to share! The deadline is April 10. See full guidelines at this link:
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These poems by Kenneth Rexroth, Denise Levertov, and Robert Frost are collected in The Ecopoetry Anthology, edited by Ann Fisher-Wirth and Laura-Gray Street; © Trinity University Press, San Antonio TX, 2020
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Liverworts are ancient non-vascular plants, some 9,000 different species inhabiting every continent except Antarctica and almost every habitat and niche. They have been grouped with mosses and hornworts in the division Bryophyta, although some taxonomists split them into their own division, Marchantiophyta. One particular species, Frullania eboracensis, the New York Scalewort, is particularly noticeable on smooth barked trees such as beech, maple, and holly.
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The Most of It
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He thought he kept the universe alone;
For all the voice in answer he could wake
Was but the mocking echo of his own
From some tree-hidden cliff across the lake.
Some morning from the boulder-broken beach
He would cry out on life, that what it wants
Is not its own love back in copy speech,
But counter-love, original response.
And nothing ever came of what he cried
Unless it was the embodiment that crashed
In the cliff’s talus on the other side,
And then in that far-distant water splashed,
But after a time allowed for it to swim,
Instead of proving human when it neared
And someone else additional to him,
As a great buck it powerfully appeared,
Pushing the crumpled water up ahead,
And landed pouring like a waterfall,
And stumbled through the rocks with horny tread,
And forced the underbrush – and that was all.
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Robert Frost
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Doughton Park Tree 2019-02-09
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POETRY FOR EARTH DAY 2025
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All ethics so far evolved rest upon a single premise: that the individual is a member of a community of interdependent parts. . . . The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or collectively: the land.
Aldo Leopold
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VERSE & IMAGE celebrates Earth Day, April 22, throughout National Poetry Month. Do you have a favorite poem that enlarges the boundaries of community? That notices the often overlooked? That celebrates all life on earth as one family together?
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Send your poem to: ++++++++ ecopoetry@griffinpoetry.com
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We may share it in one of several posts dedicated to living together on our living planet.
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Please read these GUIDELINES:
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Deadline April 10, 2025, midnight Eastern Daylight Time USA
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Send ONE poem by any author other than yourself addressing the theme of community.
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Include the poem in the body of an email, or as a .DOC or .RTF attachment, to ecopoetry@griffinpoetry.com.
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Please add info about where the poem has been published.
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Also include a personal statement – how do you feel connected to this poem? What does it mean to you? How has it connected you to the earth? [I would suggest 100 words or less; may be edited for length.]
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Visit GriffinPoetry.com between April 15 and April 30 to see if your poem has been selected for presentation.
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Optional: if you submit one poem by an author other than yourself, you may also submit one original poem on the same theme that you have written. We prefer previously published – include acknowledgments.
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VERSE & IMAGE is a weekly blog of poetry, nature photography, personal essay, and ecology.
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