Posts Tagged ‘Southern writing’
Birds & Bees (& Worms)
Posted in Imagery, tagged Bill Griffin, family, Finishing Line Press, imagery, nature photography, poetry, Sarah Cummins Small, Southern writing, Stitches on August 22, 2025| 6 Comments »
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[with 3 poems by Sarah Small]
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Dad, Peeling Apples
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++++++ The color of wheat
bread speckled
like the skin of a Golden Delicious,
freckles on top of freckles
and tiny nicks
from his knife, dots of blood
turned to brown scabs.
My father’s hands
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have never changed. Every night
a different apple
skinned naked,
split and seeded without him
ever looking down, loving the fit
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of apple
in the left hand, brown-handled
knife in the right.
He licks the tip of his finger
where the juice runs clear
and skewers a slice
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for me, which I take
regardless
of whether I want
an apple or whether
the flesh has begun to brown
around the edges.
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When he is done,
knife set down and fingers wiped
clean against the legs
of his beige corduroys, I will take
the leathered back
of his hand to my cheek
and hold it there, begging
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his weathered roots to spread
their soil-caked fingers
long and strong
as deep as the generations will go.
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Sarah Cummins Small
from Stitches, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, Kentucky. © 2025
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Last week I was out on the Mountains-to-Sea Trail with Bob and Steve digging ditches. “Erosion mitigation features” – yeah, ditches. Along one stretch we kept turning up huge earthworms, dozens of them, fat and long as little snakes. As we rescued each one and chucked him/her off the trail, Bob turned to me, local naturalist, and asked, “Say Bill, can you tell which is male and which is female?” Smirk on, Bob. If I recall correctly from Mrs. Schilling’s high school biology, every worm is both. One end is boy and the other end is girl, hermaphrodites. When they want to make little wormlets, they line up parallel head to tail and exchange genetic material. Slimy but exciting!
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Thank you Hermes, Aphrodite, and Mrs. Schilling, whose motto was, “There’s no place in the world for weak women!” Everybody, now, hands on! as we dissected our earthworm. And each 9-week term Mrs. Schilling also sent us out collecting: leaves, insects, fungi. In mid-winter Ohio it was bare bud identification time, each labeled per Linnaeus. I’ve never forgotten Acer rubrum and Quercus alba. My lab partner Dave tried to foist off the bare tip of his defunct Christmas tree as one of his collected buds. Just before he turned his project in, I replaced its label (Pinus pinus?) with Gluteus maxiumus. It was exactly five minutes before Mrs. Schilling’s menacing contralto penetrated to our back row table: “Mr. Mason, come forward!”
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Mrs. Schilling was one of my three most memorable teachers (Mr. Geigel, English, and Herr Watt, German, the other two). I am still in love with Latin binomials and squishy things thanks to her. Mrs. Schilling would certainly never shrink from describing in the most squirm-inducing detail the reproductive habits of earthworms. And at age 15 who is not obsessed with sex in all its varieties, manifestations, and practices? I can’t in all honesty confess that the mystery has even now been fully dispelled, although I think I may have finally figured out the convoluted sex life of ferns. (Listen up, y’all, that’s pronounced Thallus.)
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When I was 12, Dad never sat me down for THE TALK. He just handed me a slim pamphlet, mysteriously titled Where You Came From, then sent me off to read it somewhere my little brother couldn’t peep. “When you’re finished, let me know if you have any questions.” I returned it to him later with the 1965 equivalent of “All good,” but for at least the next two years I still confused female anatomy with British monarchy (Elizabeth Regina). And now I’m supposed to be the one to sit Dad down at 98 and explain to him the facts of why he can’t be asking his physical therapist out on a date? I think I’d rather just stick with the earthworms.
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War
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++++++ Our mother is beautiful
Without makeup, with the round balls
Of her cheekbones like crabapples
Or plums, and her crooked front
Tooth. But with a little
Pencil to shade in the sharp arch
Of eyebrows and bright red lipstick, she becomes
A black-and-white
Photograph hung in a young man’s barracks
Where in the early evening before dark
And after a green supper, one soldier lies
Sideways on his cot facing her,
Tracing the soft outline of her cheek
With one knuckle, three fingers from his lips
To hers and back. We will never be
So carefully memorized.
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Sarah Cummins Small
from Stitches, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, Kentucky. © 2025
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We will never be / so carefully memorized – Sarah Small begins her collection Stitches with a portrait of her parents in the 1940’s, deeply imagined, drawn deep from her heart. Poem by poem she pieces a quilt of memory and legacy, reverence and longing. This is one poetry collection that left me wanting more when I had turned the final page. Its beautiful pattern gradually emerges, on each page so carefully felt and conveyed. The simplest things conceal the greatest mysteries. Within the simplest the greatest is revealed.
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The poet’s eye and ear, her imagery and music, each delicate detail and meticulous observation, all the lives shared, every secret revealed: the colors and textures arrange themselves until we recognize not only the poet’s family but our own place among the tribe of humankind. These are indeed the stitches that gather us into a single human family.
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Stitches is Sarah Cummins Small’s debut collection and is available HERE.
The book’s cover art and design are by Summer Small.
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Unstitched
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I am held together
by tiny stitches
on small scraps of feed sack,
snatches of wool, snips of gingham.
A patchwork of pastels—
a slipshod collage of cotton.
I’ve been silk, satin, taffeta;
I’ve been flowers, polka-dots, and plaid.
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Thin white thread
++++ ++++ zig-zags
++++ across
++++ ++++ the decades
++++ hemming me in, keeping me
from ripping.
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I’ve been zipped.
++++ Buttoned.
++++ ++++ Unsnapped.
I’ve been bumblebunched, twisted,
and straightened. Held pins in my mouth,
pricked fingers, and calloused
my thimble-less thumbs.
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I am done.
Unravel me now:
Rip out the seams
one by one, untwist strings
and untangle knots. Fold me gently.
What I haven’t finished—
take now.
Begin again.
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Sarah Cummins Small
from Stitches, Finishing Line Press, Georgetown, Kentucky. © 2025
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Just a reminder that I m leading a naturalist hike the morning of Friday, September 12, 2025 on the Mountains-to-Sea Trail near Elkin and you are invited. During the month of September we celebrate the birthday of the MST! It’s an easy walk, 2 hours or so, lots of stops to check out flora and fauna. Sign up at:
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And if you can’t come on the Friday, we will probably repeat the hike on Saturday, September 27. Sign up with Elkin Valley Trails Association at Meetup.com to receive notices.
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Convolutions
Posted in ecology, family, poetry, tagged Beth Copeland, Bill Griffin, ecology, I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart, imagery, nature photography, nature poetry, NC Poets, poetry, Redhawk Publications, Southern writing on August 8, 2025| 6 Comments »
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[with 3 poems by Beth Copeland]
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Fog
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Morning fog erases the mountain and trees.
No, not an erasure but unseen.
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Not an erasure but unseen.
The mountain, the laurel still green.
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Unlike the mountain and laurel still green,
the dearly departed lie beneath white sheets.
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The deer depart beneath white sheets
of fog, stepping into a forgotten dream
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of fog slipping into a forgotten dream
the ghost mountain dreams.
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The ghost mountain dreams.
Crows fly to pines on mascara wings.
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Crows fly to pines on mascara wings,
mourning. Fog erases the mountain, the trees.
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Beth Copeland
from I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart, Redhawk Publications, The Catawba Valley Community College Press, Hickory NC; © 2025
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It’s a big web, here in the corner of our screened porch, but I’m not ready yet to broom it down. The spider is a jointed dried kernel in its center; when I blow, she doesn’t twitch. I don’t see an egg pouch or spiderlings. The strands are not an orb but a diffuse tangle, a chaos of delicate angles and tensions — a miniature of filaments revealed by the background microwave radiation that weave the structure of our entire universe. And what are they made of, those filaments? These I can see before me are nanometer reworkings of hemolymph from mosquitoes denied the opportunity to bite me. Most visible when dusted with pollen. A mess. But I and my broom are not ready yet to offend, to say farewell to the tribe of spiders.
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Last week we visited Blue Whales with our grandson, turning eight. The North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh is hosting this exhibit of the largest creatures that have ever lived on our planet – the mystery of their migrations, language, culture; the vital interconnections between their diet of krill, their massive enriching orange poop, and the entire deep ocean ecology. Linda and I stood in silence before the model of a blue whale brain and a model of our own. The whale’s is twice as large and twice as complex, convoluted with its twisting gyri and deep sulci. Surely such an abundance of neurons and synapses must create thoughts as complex as our own. Or more so. And yet blue whales struggle to survive as a species in a world degraded by human beings. I am thinking of that brain and I am not ready yet to say farewell to the tribe of whales.
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Chapel Hill cartoonist Keith Knight draws a weekly panel titled (th)ink. Today’s is a portrait of and quotation by James Baldwin (1924-1987): “To be a Negro in this country & to be relatively conscious is to be in a rage almost all the time.” Human being who is relatively conscious, choose your own rage focal point du jour – human beings caged like animals in a Florida concentration camp; children intentionally starved to advance a particular political agenda; boosting fossil fuels burned to appease a few billionaires; an ocean filled with plastic nanoparticles and deafening human vibrations where blue whales may soon be extinct? Some days I feel like I am not ready to go on living. Some days I am more than ready to say goodbye to the tribe of humans. In a few years I will depart as an inhabitant of planet Earth. Some years after that the last memory of my having been an inhabitant will finally depart as well. On that day, will any whales still remain to swim the depths? Will any love between humans remain, or any love for other creatures? I am not ready yet to answer.
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October Valentine
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A heart-shaped leaf spied in the weeds on my walk
down the hill to the mailbox. I didn’t see a redbud tree
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on the roadside, so it must have lifted on the wind
and dropped – a gift! – near my feet. Is it a message
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from someone I love – my sweet mother in a halo of light,
my father singing the names of trees in his strong baritone?
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Or is it from someone I’ve never seen and may never meet?
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As I hike up the hill, I tuck the leaf in my pocket, rubbing it
with my thumb – as if I could read it – skin to skin – by osmosis.
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Halfway home, I stop to study it. Cerise with splotches of green,
dark spots, a wormhole bored like a bullet wound, a battered
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heart, like yours, like mine, but maybe its scars make it more
beautiful than before. My friends, there’s still so much
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love in this world even when you’re alone.
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Beth Copeland
from I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart, Redhawk Publications, The Catawba Valley Community College Press, Hickory NC; © 2025
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Is it strange for me to be toying with despair while reading a book of healing and love like Beth Copeland’s I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart? Actually, if you’re not toying with despair you are the strange one. Give grudging thanks, though. Thank the stars and the mysterious hemlocks and the dark fecund earth that in a world full of rage and despair there are poems like Beth Copeland’s. These poems know the feeling of being lost in endless night. These poems have been battered, they have fallen, they have doubted plenty of times whether there is any wholeness or healing available to them, but these poems stand up to testify, My friends, there’s still so much love in this world even when you’re alone.
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Often I tell myself it is ridiculous to imagine that any sort of inner peace is possible. I have my share of personal regrets and ongoing grief, and even though I’m tempted to look around and envy those people who don’t, when I’m really honest I admit that no one escapes whipping. But peace can’t be a wall built around my sadness – walls keep more things in than out. Despair is inevitable. How foolish is it, then, and how strange, to spend a few hours with a book of words arranged in lines on paper and discover the tightness in my throat is easing? The mountain has rested in one place for 480 million; today its peak is less than a third of its height when it was first thrust up in the big crunch. Does it reflect on loss and diminishment, or does it find peace in the weight of its daily being? Am I inflamed and scarred by the revelations of Beth Copeland’s battles and pain, or am I grateful for her gratitude and strengthened by her strength?
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The tribe of human beings seems determined to destroy itself. The tribe of human beings seems determined to link arms and hearts in love. Perhaps discovering a moment of beauty is not a cowardly attempt to escape dire reality – perhaps it is the only thing capable of healing us.
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Explore REDHAWK Publications, including Beth Copeland’s I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart and Shibori Blue: Thirty-Six Views of the Peak HERE.
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Sample poems from Shibori Blue at Verse & Image HERE.
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More information about the North Carolina Museum of Nature Sciences HERE.
Dive into the K Chronicles with Keith Knight HERE.
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My Daughter Paints a Mountain
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She wasn’t thinking as her brush swept
across canvas in wave-length strokes,
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channeling a crest she’d never seen,
while I was still in the Sandhills
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where there aren’t any hills, just fields
of cotton, soybeans, and cedar stumps
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in swamp water, sleeping on an air mattress
in a small apartment with prints and paintings
propped against walls instead of hung,
newly separated, newly sober, living
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between the husband and home I’d left
and a haven I hadn’t found yet.
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As I drove up a steep road to see a house
in the Blue Ridge, a large buck leapt
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in front of the car to welcome me,
and I knew I’d found my new home.
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I didn’t know the mountain seen at the top
of the hill was the mountain she’d painted
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months before, and she didn’t know I’d move
to that house with a view of the mountain
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she’d painted as if in a dream or fugue.
How could her mountain – purple, lavender,
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pink, and forest green swirled to a peak
with white streak of snow against a blue sky –
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mirror the one framed in my window?
Was it coincidence or synchronicity
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that the mountain in her mind’s
eye was more map than metaphor?
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It was a message from the universe:
You’re home. Open the door.
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Beth Copeland
from I Ask the Mountain to Heal My Heart, Redhawk Publications, The Catawba Valley Community College Press, Hickory NC; © 2025
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Glad to hear from you Jenny. May life continue to surprise . . . ---B