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Editors’ Picks Issue 19
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Litanies of Reclamation
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The Children of Pyongyang
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How Far Does Forgiveness Reach?
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A Trio of Lenten Readers
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Michael and Margaretha Sattler
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The Blessed Woman of Nazareth
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New Heaven, New War
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Born to Us
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My Fearless Future
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Covering the Cover: School for Life
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The Community of Education
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Readers Respond: Issue 19
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Family and Friends: Issue 19
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Verena Arnold
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Tundra Swans
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A Debt to Education
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What’s the Good of a School?
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A School of One
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On Praying for Your Children
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The World Is Your Classroom
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The Good Reader
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Orchestras of Change
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The Habit of Lack Is Hell to Break
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Kindergarten
The Given Note
A visual interpretation of Seamus Heaney’s poem asks where music comes from.
By Julian Peters
November 16, 2023
This poetry comic is excerpted from Poems to See By.
“The Given Note” from Seamus Heaney, Door into the Dark (London: Faber & Faber, 1969). Used with permission.
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Eugene McAleer
Wonderful illustrations. The poem was inspired by a tune called The tune of the ghosts(or fairies). It is said the tune came to a fiddler in rough weather when he was wandering around at night alone in the ruined village off the S.W. coast of Ireland. Seamus Heaney comes from Derry, in Ireland. I grew up not far from there and love his poetry.
Diantha L Zschoche
I fell in love with Ecphasis many years ago after a work shop I attended. I am a poet so I often let my words capture the voice or a painting or music, etc. I look forward to seeing more of his work.
Christina
Beautiful! Thank you.