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Readers Respond
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GEDs for Myanmar Migrants
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Inside Nyansa Classical Community
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Watching the Geminids
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A World Full of Signs
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Covering the Cover: The Riddle of Nature
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Back from Walden Pond
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Can Masculinity Be Good?
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Nature Is Obsessed with Me
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Ancient Songs in the Desert
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The Sadness of the Creatures
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Meeting the Wolf
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Saskatchewan, Promised Land
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The Plants Can Talk
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Saving the Soil, Saving the Farm
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The Wonder of Moths
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The Leper of Abercuawg
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Dandelions: An Apology
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A Wilderness God
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Why I Hunt
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Reading the Book of Nature
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Breakwater
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Lambing Season
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Earthworks Urban Farm
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Are You a Tree?
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Practicing Christianity
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Who Gets to Tell the Story?
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A Medievalist Looks for the Image of Christ
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In Defense of Chastity
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Poem: “Let Them Grow”
A front of thunderstorms had sought you out.
It vowed to run a diabolical
black line through all that you were sure about—
the ordinary, sane, the sensible.
You raced to get the loose stuff off the lawn,
with purpose rearranged and stacked the chairs,
relieved, almost, when the phenomenon
of gray-green storm clouds simplified your cares.
And though it couldn’t miss, it kind of did.
Darkness at noon gave way to sun at one.
Catastrophe and doom had been short-lived.
Embarrassed that your fears were overblown,
you faced your mundane day-to-day concerns,
vaguely upset that normalcy returns.
This poem was shortlisted for the Rhina Espaillat Poetry Award in 2023. Find out how to enter your poems here.
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