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Poem: “Sonnet Addressed to George Oppen, Arlington National Cemetery”
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Diaconía Paraguay
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Winners of the Second Annual Rhina Espaillat Poetry Award
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Letters from Readers
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Charles de Foucauld
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Covering the Cover: Hope in Apocalypse
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War Is Worse Than Almost Anything
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The Last Battle, Revisited
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The Problem with Nuclear Deterrence
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A Haven of Olives
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Book Tour: Time for an Intervention
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Hoping for Doomsday
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Radical Hope
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The Sermon of the Wolf
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The New Malthusians
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The Spiritual Roots of Climate Crisis
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Tradition and Disruption
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The Apocalyptic Visions of Wassily Kandinsky
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War and the Church in Ukraine: Part 1
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The Griefs of Childhood
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Everything Will Not Be OK
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Jesus and the Future of the Earth
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The Other Side of Revelation
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American Apocalypse
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Syria’s Seed Planters
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At the End of the Ages Is a Song
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Searching for Safety
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Stable Condition
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Editors’ Picks: In the Margins
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Editors’ Picks: The Genesis of Gender
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Editors’ Picks: Sea of Tranquility
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Poem: “Stopping By with Flowers”
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This poem was a finalist for Plough’s 2022 Rhina Espaillat Poetry Award.
When I ask him to cut as’ab
he hesitates, then shudders it gone.
He pulls a stalk away, shows his grandson
how to stomp it down, crack the stalk at the base
so the roots keep growing, shows him oud,
musical knuckle of root-band, bud furrow and leaf scar.
Canines tear and molars grind, we tongue
the sweet sting, spit pulp and pluck string while he
tells us how neighborhood kids spun quarters and
whacked them with a stick of as’ab.
Whoever stuck the spinning quarter got to keep it.
The quarter or the cane I ask, and he laughs.
Then I grew up. He holds the as’ab along one forearm
like an offered prayer, drives the knife down,
peels down the purple-green stalk and spins
one about fellahin who were sucking sugarcane
telling stories all night, couldn’t find their canes
and had to hobble home in the morning and he laughs
and we laugh hard, as hard as the year.
When I ask if I can help he shakes his head
because he once drove a knife down
into his forearm cutting as’ab
and his memory of sweetness with pain is long
and long, as long as the sugarcane.
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