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Poem: “A Backward Look”
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Poem: “Where Nectar Was”
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Felix Manz
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Covering the Cover: The Violence of Love
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The Case for Meekness
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Letters from Readers
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Learning Generosity in Syria
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A Tireless Peacemaker
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Turning a Corner
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Behind the Black Umbrellas
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With Love We Shall Force Our Brothers
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The Risk of Gentleness
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The Great Escape
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Militant Peacemaking
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Peacemaking Is Political
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Beyond Pacifism
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A Life That Answers War
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Excerpt: Freiheit!
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Did You Kill Anyone?
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Poem: “Candid”
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Poem: “March Thaw”
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The Minimalist
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Call to Prayer, Call to Bread
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Editors’ Picks: Charis in the World of Wonders
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Editors’ Picks: The Reindeer Chronicles
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Editors’ Picks: I Ain’t Marching Anymore
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Editors’ Picks: “Floaters”
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Poetry You Can Touch
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Poem: “Annuals”
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Poem: “The Widow Offers Herself to Life”
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Poem: “Mary Magdalen Responds to the Harsh Judge”
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I knew a man who judged himself with such
inclemency that he pronounced each move
he made—in retrospect—either too much
or not enough. What did he need to prove,
to no one but himself? What made him so
harsh with himself when others found him better—
no, best—at everything? We’ll never know.
Grave childhood losses, maybe, dark regret, or
massive ambition thwarted, though he made
himself a name revered, and rose to be
eminent in his field, and richly paid.
And noted for his poems, in which he
hinted at failure with such rare success
that every “no” he wept for sang like “yes.”
Read an interview with the poet.
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