Posts Tagged ‘NC Poets’
Earth Day 2025 – Poems for the Earth
Posted in ecology, Ecopoetry, tagged Bill Griffin, Earth Day, ecology, Ecopoetry, nature photography, nature poetry, NC Poets, poetry on April 22, 2025| 8 Comments »
.
[poems by Veiga Simões, Barbara Conrad, Mary Oliver, Camille Dungy –
selected and shared by Christina Baumis, David Radavich,
Scott Owens, Bill Griffin]
.
Ao Viandante
(To the Person Who Passes Through This Place)
.
You that pass and raise your arm to me
before you hurt me, look at me well.
I am the heat of your home in the cold winter nights.
I am the friendly shade that you find
when walking under the August sun
And my fruits are appetizing freshness
That satisfy your thirst on the way.
I am the friendly beam of your house, the board of your table
the bed in which you rest and the wood of your boat.
I am handle of your hoe, the door of your dwelling
the wood of your cradle and of your own coffin.
I am the bread of goodness and the flower of beauty.
You that pass, look at me well and do no harm.
.
Veiga Simões
a tree with a poem on sign beneath it, located in Lisbon, Portugal.
.
This poem brings into stark view how we use and harm trees in a final plea from the tree; “You pass, look at me well and do no harm.” The poem certainly made me ponder the consideration of a grove of trees and what they give of themselves for us and our community over generations from their community. As a nature lover who enjoys walks under and among trees, trees had my gratitude already, yet this poem enhanced it even more. The poem is written almost a caveat, testimonial, or witness statement from the specific tree in Lisbon. The article in which this appeared had a nice side note about the relationship between tree canopies and crime rates, too. – Christina Baumis
.
❦
.
Evergreen trees are like nature’s high rises; their community intermingles to sustain ecosystems as well as us. Posted on the California Urban Forests Councils’ Facebook Page (published on January 21, 2024) from their Haiku contest 2024.
.
❦❦❦
.
The last word in ignorance is the man who says of an animal or plant: ‘What good is it?’ If the land mechanism as a whole is good, then every part is good, whether we understand it or not. … To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering. – Aldo Leopold
.
❦❦❦
.
Blue in Winter, Blame the Moon
.
+++ after a New York Times article on biological rhythms,
+++ peppered with phrases from the dining section
.
Blue in winter, blame the moon, say the scientists
for anyone living dark in the northern latitudes.
.
Overeating, sleeping in fits, activity cycles
shifted—even for mutant hamsters and fruit flies.
.
We trudge through cabbage season, tongue tingling
at the thought of gumbo and Sazerac, more laissez-faire
.
than the fusty French. Earth spins and the moon
thumps inside our cells. Trillions of clocks, ticking, ticking.
.
The universe feels it. Some cataclysm must have caused
our nights to topple like this, seasons spliced
.
like a butchered hog. We’re a mélange of earth crust
and asteroid dust—yes, that asteroid,
.
ejected into space, continuing as moon, tilting
primordial earth. We are orbs of something
.
we can’t quite claim. A recipe for stardust.
Chickpeas coming home to roost.
.
Barbara Conrad
from There Is a Field, Future Cycle; © 2018
.
I have long been a fan of Barbara Conrad’s poetry, admiring her commitment to social justice causes. This poem is remarkable for its yoking of the cosmic and the everyday, with climate change radiating in the nexus between galactic forces and routine human activities like eating and sleeping. Plus lots of colorful imagery you can feel and taste. The final line is a trenchant joke but also brings the interplanetary down to earth, namely to our dinner tables. Delicious! – David Radavich
.
❦
.
In the New Year
.
Ice is on the move—
broken off and floating freely
toward South Georgia Island
with a force to wipe out
indigenous life
and redirect our planet.
.
Those of us far away
see mostly waters rising,
rising, claiming
sand and beach houses
and boats of the wealthy
along lapping shores.
.
Carving of life
by the power of tides.
.
So we arrive at
another year: uprisings,
more ire in politics,
love reduced to islands
under siege,
.
we move inward
to protect ourselves—
bold nesting terns
or astronauts
in deepest space.
.
David Radavich
from Snapdragon
.
❦❦❦
.
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
.
.
❦❦❦
.
Wild Geese
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting –
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.
.
Mary Oliver
from Dream Work, Atlantic Monthly Press; © 1986.
.
One of my favorite poems ever by one of my favorite poets ever. Wild Geese simply reminds me of my place in the intricate web of existence, in the universal community. – Scott Owens
.
❦
.
Wild and Precious
In Memoriam, Mary Oliver, 1/17/19
.
Seen at a distance this time of year
when trees are silhouettes
against a white sky
every shadow, I think,
must be a bird I’d like to identify,
waxwings, falcon, the largest of them
surely a beautiful hawk waiting
to chase a careless squirrel
across the yard and twice
around the trunk of the pecan tree,
rising on perfectly banked wings
so close it could almost reach out
and grasp the tuft of tail fur
dancing behind.
.
Often it turns out to be mistletoe,
nest, mere leftover leaves,
but even these speak
of life that was,
that will soon enough return,
and that thankfully always is.
.
Mary Oliver, the woman I’ve introduced
to more than 40 years of new students
as one of our greatest living poets,
died today,
but in view of trees, and birds,
and winter skies, and everything
that can be expressed in leaves,
it is impossible to think of her
as ever going away.
.
Scott Owens
from Prepositional, Redhawk Publications; © 2022
.
❦❦❦
.
A philosopher has called this imponderable essence the numenon of material things. It stands in contradistinction to phenomenon, which is ponderable and predictable, even to the tossing and turning of the remotest star. The grouse is the numenon of the north woods, the blue jay of the hickory groves, the whisky-jack of the muskegs, the piñonero of the juniper foothills. – Aldo Leopold
.
.
❦❦❦
.
Trophic Cascade
.
After the reintroduction of gray wolves
to Yellowstone and, as anticipated, their culling
of deer, trees grew beyond the deer stunt
of the mid century. In their up reach
songbirds nested, who scattered
seed for underbrush, and in that cover
warrened snowshoe hare. Weasel and water shrew
returned, also vole, and came soon hawk
and falcon, bald eagle, kestrel, and with them
hawk shadow, falcon shadow. Eagle shade
and kestrel shade haunted newly-berried
runnels where mule deer no longer rummaged, cautious
as they were, now, of being surprised by wolves. Berries
brought bear, while undergrowth and willows, growing
now right down to the river, brought beavers,
who dam. Muskrats came to the dams, and tadpoles.
Came, too, the night song of the fathers
of tadpoles. With water striders, the dark
gray American dipper bobbed in fresh pools
of the river, and fish stayed, and the bear, who
fished, also culled deer fawns and to their kill scraps
came vulture and coyote, long gone in the region
until now, and their scat scattered seed, and more
trees, brush, and berries grew up along the river
that had run straight and so flooded but thus dammed,
compelled to meander, is less prone to overrun. Don’t
you tell me this is not the same as my story. All this
life born from one hungry animal, this whole,
new landscape, the course of the river changed,
I know this. I reintroduced myself to myself, this time
a mother. After which, nothing was ever the same.
.
Camille T. Dungy
from Trophic Cascade, Wesleyan University Press. August 16, 2021 at Poems.com
.
Yesterday walking beside Elkin Creek, Linda and I remarked that Wood Anemone and Star Chickweed like to grow together. Each white bloom points to its friend and neighbor. Why? Just the right balance of sun and shade for them both? Enough nourishment in the leaf mould but not too much? Are their tiny hands clasped beneath the surface in a group hug of mycorrhizal fungus?
.
I remind myself that the connections and community are so much vaster than I can even imagine. And I recall this final quotation by Aldo Leopold:
.
❦
. . . Modern natural history deals only incidentally with the identity of plants and animals, and only incidentally with their habits and behaviors. It deals principally with their relations to each other, their relations to the soil and water in which they grow, and their relations to the human beings who sing about “my Country” but see little or nothing of its inner workings. – Aldo Leopold
.
[all quotations are from A Sand County Almanac, Oxford University Press. © 1989]
.
❦❦❦
.
.
Elemental – Scott Owens
Posted in Imagery, tagged Bill Griffin, Elemental, imagery, nature, nature photography, nature poetry, NC Poets, poetry, Redhawk Publications, Scott Owens, Southern writing on March 28, 2025| 5 Comments »
.
after rain the hills
fill up with mist, everything
else just memory
.
[poetry by Scott Owens]
.
Elemental
.
Having been raised in shadow of pecan trees
he learned to keep his insecurities
concealed in shells the color of earth, almost
inextricable and gathered in brown paper bags.
.
Having been shaped by twisted logic of weather
in South Carolina’s Tornado Alley,
he learned when to move with wind and when
to stand fast and howl against the blow.
.
Having been dipped in yellow water
without being held by anything but current
he learned to sink to the bottom, plant his feet
in mud below and walk back to shore.
.
Having been burned in fires of passion and forgiveness,
faith and disbelief, he learned to trust little
but what he could see: bird flight, dirt
beneath the nails, quiet eternity of mountain.
.
Scott Owens
from Elemental, forthcoming in 2025 from Redhawk Press, Hickory NC; © Scott Owens.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Where is the transition point between cluttered and ungodly mess? I gave up long ago any hope of keeping my desktop tidy or my bookshelves neatly organized. For the past year, however, the normal books and papers and camera gear have been invaded and overcome by bins, boxes, and bags. Here’s a sampling:
file boxes of my parents’ financial and tax records, 2023 to present;
banker’s boxes of photos I’m bound and determined to sort, 1920’s and even earlier;
crumbling carton of 35 mm home movies shot by Grandpop, who died in 1958;
and before I totally blame Mom and Dad, one chair is completely full of books and magazines I’ve read or intend to, and the other chair is completely loaded with gear, field guides, and two dozen clip boards with botanical checklists I’ll hand out at my next naturalist walk in a week.
.
And one other thing among so many others that have not yet discovered or been granted their ultimate place of repose: a heavy oak urn containing my mother’s ashes.
.
The urn I will keep close and heft from time to time. Is any of this other stuff really essential? I don’t believe I will ever lose the picture in my head of Mom on her bicycle, luminous smile, age 11 – perhaps these boxes don’t hold anything that can surpass that memory. I can’t conceive of a meaningful life that doesn’t include a camera in my hand, but after all I can only hold one at a time. And the books! I’m planning to surprise thirty or so friends with a (comfortably read) book for Poetry Month, but the groaning weight of the remainder will scarcely feel the loss.
.
Whelm: To cover, submerge, engulf or bury; to overcome. Why have I made myself responsible for these accumulations? Am I their curator, conservator, salvager? Or do I expect this stuff to somehow save me? Buried by the non-essential all around me, perhaps I can thrash and claw my way through while I ignore my own ultimate burial.
.
In a minute perhaps I’ll withdraw my hands from typing, swivel away from the screen, actually open one of these bins and boxes. Maybe I’ll chuck a dusty double handful in the trash. But maybe I’ll pull out a talisman that opens my soul to more luminous memories. I will smile and share what I’ve found. It will be a treasure not of precious metal or envious resale value but because of the door it opens. A sliver of light finds its way through and reveals one moment that has made meaning in this life. A moment that still has meaning. Not the old material stuff but the memories it carries on its back: from something here I might discover something new about myself, the ones I love, this overwhelming life. I might find something essential.
.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Of Mint and Memory
.
The smell of mint makes everything feel clean,
clears the senses like bells ringing,
or wind chimes, maybe, on a summer day
in 1973, after the war but before
the bomb became too real a thing to ignore.
.
They say that smell is our most powerful sense,
not the strongest, not the one
we use the most, but the one we find
closest to memory and feeling, the one
most difficult to ignore, resist, overcome.
.
I’ve given up patches of my yard to mint
so I’ll always have it for tea,
for homemade chocolate chip ice cream,
for the times I need to go back to days
when I didn’t know enough to be afraid.
.
Scott Owens
from Elemental, forthcoming in 2025 from Redhawk Press, Hickory NC; © Scott Owens.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Linda listening to Fauré while she reads. A brown thrasher sneaking into the holly just outside my window. Lacing up for another afternoon walk in the woods. I could list a dozen necessary things that have intruded on this morning, but if I take a deep breath and reflect on what is essential those first three seem like a good start. Last night we drove by a church signboard with this suggestion: “Do one thing today that makes the world a better place.” Essential. I would add, “one thing that makes you a better person.” Paying attention. Gratitude. Joy. If even for a moment, make space in the necessary for the essential.
.
Scott Owens is always on the lookout for the essential. His new manuscript, Elemental, expands and reinforces the search. Expect to encounter the essential and you will! Scott has written thousands of poems to ground himself in the seeking and yet he still finds joyful surprise in the daily happenings and encounters that make real meaning in life, if you allow them to. Perhaps it is because he is intentional and systematic in his noticing that he discovers joy all around him. This book includes a section on the seasons, a travelogue section especially exploring North Carolina, a final section of life’s lessons. I will use it as a field guide for the truly essential.
.
Oh, and trees. Scott really, really loves trees, both in their grand collective leafiness and in their individual personalities. He mentions that he grew up around pecan trees and learned something about hiding vulnerability from the way their shells hide the sweet kernel. I’d like to sit down with Scott and swap yarns about the pecans in Granddaddy’s back yard. Or my beloved beech I will not forsake even though it dropped a branch through my windshield. Or the hundred colors of lichen on the holly’s bark. Then we will move on to birds, and mountains, and the sound of moving water. We will discover how much we have in common. We will nod and share a slice of joy in the discovery that every single creature on earth holds that much in common and more. That joy, that knowledge, is truly essential.
.
❦
.
Keep your eyes peeled at Redhawk Publications for Scott Owens’s new book, Elemental, due out by this August, 2025.
.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
All That Is
.
It’s winter,
a hard time of year
for noticing things,
except the wide sky
through limbs of trees,
and the shapes of trees
stripped of leaves,
and a white-breasted nuthatch
hopping sideways
down the trunk
of a peeling paper birch,
and the omnipresent cold,
and the quiet
of everyone staying inside
as long as they possibly can,
but all that is not there,
in the haunted austerity
of a winter landscape,
is what makes it possible
to see all that is
.
Scott Owens
from Elemental, forthcoming in 2025 from Redhawk Press, Hickory NC; © Scott Owens.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
For the Unseen
Posted in Imagery, tagged Astonished to Wake, Bill Griffin, imagery, Jacar Press, Julie Suk, nature, nature photography, NC Poets, poetry, Southern writing on March 21, 2025| 2 Comments »
.
[with 3 poems by Julie Suk]
.
We’re Small on the Rim
.
of comprehension, but that shouldn’t distract
us from the fig tree
.
bent by fleshy globes on the verge of fall,
seed exposed where the fruit splits.
.
And there are the aunts
leaning over a cast-iron kettle filled
with sugar, spices, and a curl of lemon zest –
.
figs stewing, jars lined up, the ladle lifted
for a sample sip –
++++ never mind the times my lips were burned
++++ by a sweetness giving more than I gave back.
.
Hold out your hand for the unseen
my grandfather said.
.
There, the universe,
a potpourri of energy lit by colorful fires
that sparked me to life,
.
++++ accident though it was,
.
limb of the fig tree scratching the house,
on the table, a spoon.
.
Julie Suk
from Astonished to Wake, Jacar Press, Durham NC; © 2016
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
I am crying for the beauty of these trees. An upwelling of emotion? A brain response slung through limbic system from temporal lobe because of certain inverted images on my retina? No, a watery reaction to pollen. Hazel catkins stirring in the breeze. An itch, a sneeze. But still I am crying for the beauty of these little trees.
.
How one says a thing is more important that what one says. We stop along the nature trail to notice this unequivocal manifestation of Spring – drooping yellow pollen catkins on American Hazelnut, full and fertile long before any leaves appear. These are the male flowers. Where are the female? Solitary at the tips of limbs and buds, discover a few spidery red florets no bigger than your little fingernail. From these tiny nubs the nuts will form and we can eat them in September if we beat the squirrels. As I point out the female flowers, how they point mostly outward and upward away from the catkins, I catch myself before blurting this explanation: “They’re designed to prevent self pollination.”
.
Designed? The Hazels worked out this arrangement of their own volition? Or had it planned for them de novo on some cosmic drawing board? Oh Evolution, how you embrace the random and non-linear, and how we struggle to grasp such a universe. I gulp and begin a different tack. “Self pollination increases the risk of recessive traits and may weaken the line. Over many, many generations, the Hazel trees that happen to grow with their little red flowers poised to catch pollen blown in from a neighbor tree are more likely to have strong offspring that can pass that trait along.”
.
And does that explain why I cry for the beauty of these trees? All these trees? The red maples are already dropping their polleniferous bundles as winged seeds unspool from female flowers. Stony hickory nuts are still discoverable beside the trail from last fall’s excellent mast season. The green furze we spy at the ridgeline’s crown is tuliptrees’ earliest budbreak. The trees speak their names in the space they fill. They give their promises almost silently but always sure. There seems no end to the means my own species can devise to make the world harsh, hateful, ugly. There is no end to the beauty of these trees. I cry.
.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
The Dream It Was
.
Gone, the apples left last night for the deer –
.
shadows lighter than the night they passed through,
rune-like hoof marks carving the frosted lawn.
.
Like a dream,
but touch is my familiar.
.
May you and I morph into other bodies that meet
once this one goes
.
on and on into the blue heights – old trails
like those deer use around the girth of a mountain.
.
And after breath evaporates
may the words left without a tongue
fall into the pool where we swam,
.
the cold waters rushing back warm.
.
Julie Suk
from Astonished to Wake, Jacar Press, Durham NC; © 2016
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
Hold out your heart for the unseen. When there are no longer lips, a mouth, to hold our words may they pool in the places we loved. May we meet again on the blue heights, on some new trail, on a very old trail. What voice would you choose in your next life? Listen for me, a song of wind thin in the high branches.
.
❦
.
What would the new day hold for us if each morning we were astonished to wake? Dogwood scratches the window as wind picks up. Throaty testosterone rumbles as the teenager across the street starts his pickup to head to school. What could urge me out of bed instead of surrendering to warmth and pulling the covers higher? But this is a new day, the vernal equinox in fact. I confess I have reached the time of life when I can see the days ticking on ahead of me are finite in number.
.
Turning each page in Julie Suk’s Astonished to Wake is a reminder that new days are in short supply. Perhaps this one will weave its meaning from days treasured in their remembering. Perhaps this one would prefer to eat me raw. Perhaps this is the day I really will wake up and notice every person that has made my life, and even tell them so. A good book of poetry compels one to turn each page, then the next. A great book of poetry compels one to set the book aside and enter the newness of this day.
.
❦
.
From Charlotte, NC, and former managing editor of Southern Poetry Review, Julie Suk has been a beacon in the world for poetry for decades. R. T. Smith writes, “The poetry of Julie Suk is at once deceptively spare and metaphorically rich, and the sensual mystery of her perfectly pitched and etched lines is haunting, elemental, and wild.” Her many awards include the Brockman-Campbell Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society. Astonished to Wake is Julie’s sixth collection, published by Jacar Press.
.
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.
The Music
.
When my father was young, he played the violin,
his mother, the rosewood Grand.
.
She also had a voice clear and sweet,
.
also had tuberculosis and died
when my father was thirteen.
.
He never played again, but loved music,
.
the Victrola making its rounds,
or the two of us listening to opera on the radio.
.
No noise allowed in the house when Rosa Ponselle sang.
.
In my next life I want the voice of a violin.
.
Tell me what you’d like played
and I’ll speak from the key of love and pain,
.
how the living are echoes of the past,
.
my grandmother staring into the darkness – as I do now,
thinking of those I must leave.
.
Talking into the night,
we’ll hold sorrow up close and let it weep.
.
Julie Suk
from Astonished to Wake, Jacar Press, Durham NC; © 2016
.
❦ ❦ ❦
.















[…] About/Submit […]