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Church Bells of England
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Editors’ Picks: Walk with Me
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Editors’ Picks: Shakeshafte
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Editors’ Picks: The Least of Us
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Letters from Readers
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Celtic Christianity on Iona
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The Catherine Project
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Mercedes Sosa
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Covering the Cover: Why We Make Music
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Music and Morals
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The Death and Life of Christian Hardcore
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Vallenato Comes Home
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Does Political Music Change Anything?
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Adventures in Americanaland
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Music, Memory, and Alzheimer’s
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Why We Make Music
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Doing Bach Badly
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Dolly Parton Is Magnificent
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Go Tell It on the Mountain
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Reading the Comments
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In the Aztec Flower Paradise
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The Strange Love of a Strange God
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Is Congregational Singing Dead?
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In Search of Eternity
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Violas in Sing Sing
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Hosting a Hootenanny
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How to Lullaby
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How to Raise Musical Children
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How to Make Music Accessible
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Chanting Psalms in the Dark
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The Fiery Spirit of Song
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The Harmony of the World
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The Tapestry of Sound
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Let Brotherly Love Remain
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Take Up Your Cross Daily
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The Bones of Memory
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Poem: “Sunrise and Swag”
And the façades of Warsaw bared
their scrubbed-up skins; liveried waiters
offered nothing on the menu; bath water
rusted; the country roads were calm,
a past I sought long overgrown,
the state of currency still volatile,
human traces vague, all guesses wild.
Nothing left to find; nothing and no one.
But oh, the language: soft-tongued,
apologetic; those legends of tracks
pointing towards infinity; haystacks,
horse-drawn carts; disappearing villages
where elders with wizened sensibilities,
surely hungry for redemption, would
offer water, sanctuary and bread.
Perhaps they remembered. Perhaps
going about their rural business
they thought of all those trains; night
and day, the passing of human freight.
But then again, perhaps not.
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Mary Kressin
Ohhh this gave me the shivers… We visited Poland. My Aunt lived there during WW2. I heard stories. This poem makes an impact. Thank you